Porcupine baby thinks he is a puppy...so cute

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This guy eventually went to live in a wildlife sanctuary according to the story so i am sure his quills grew back.
The porcupine is a powerful rodent unique to North America; the only other place in the world where porcupines are found is in Africa, but that porcupine has enormous quills nearly a foot long and a 1/4 inch in diameter (not very suitable for quill embroidery decoration). The northern range of the common porcupine covers most of Canada, the western U.S., northern parts of New England and the Great Lakes region. Porcupines favor a wooded habitat, but some subspecies (7 in all) live in deserts and grasslands.


The porcupine is one of the largest rodents in North America, second only to the beaver, and porcupines grow to a length of 2 to 31/2 feet, tail included. They usually weigh between 8 and 14 pounds, although they have been known to weigh upwards of 35 pounds. The porcupine may live for 5 years or more in the wild, and in captivity they generally live a decade.


Although this quilled animal has several nicknames ('pricklepig' being my personal favorite), the latin name for the porcupine is Erethizon dorsatum ('to irritate with back') The Porcupine, with a body shape like other rodents, has over 30,000 quills on its body. Quills cover the back and sides of this animal, with stiffer fatter quills on its tail. There are no sharp quills on the porcupines nose, and the belly of this animal is vulnerable, covered only with stiff brown hairs. The color of the quills is white with brown or black tips, although the quills of western porcupines have yellowish colored tips.

Porcupines don't "throw" their quills; nor are they known to attack other animals. But, their quills are nature's best defense. The quills are loosely attached to the porcupine's body and an animal has to connect with the porcupine to be hit with the quills. If threatened, the porcupine raises its quills, looking like a giant pincushion. When attacked, the porcupine wields its tail back and forth pounding its quills into the adversary. The porcupine can imbed its quills almost an inch into opponents skin. Each quill has hundreds of quills have tiny barbs or hooks. Once embedded, these hooks cause the quill to work its way even deeper and they make removing set-in quills painful and difficult.
 
I've seen a few of these little critters up here in the WI Northwoods and they may look cute, especially the babies. But they're just as harmful as the adults. My brother's german shephard has had to have quills removed twice this past summer. Not fun in any case to remove, as his german shephard had to have them cut on the outside of his lip and then the remaining part, pulled through his lips with pliers. I must agree, the quills are dangerous as Red Devil has mentioned. They have many barbs on each quil and will make a real mess if you try and just pull them out. Sometimes this can't be helped. But they must be removed or they can and will cause an infection.
 
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