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Global Animal Guide
North American porcupine with quills raised in a tree
Mammal Least Concern

North American Porcupine

Erethizon dorsatum

Quick answer

The North American porcupine is a slow, nearsighted rodent armed with roughly 30,000 barbed quills covering its back and tail. It climbs trees to eat bark and leaves, defends by backing into predators, and lives across forests and tundra from Alaska to Mexico.

By the Global Animal Guide editorial team Last reviewed How we research & review

North American Porcupine facts at a glance

Key facts about the North American Porcupine
Scientific name Erethizon dorsatum
Diet Herbivore — tree bark, leaves, buds, and green plants
Habitat Forests, shrublands, and tundra across North America
Lifespan 15–18 years in the wild
Weight 5–14 kg (11–31 lb)
Top speed Up to 3 km/h (2 mph) on ground; agile in trees
Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN)
Scientific classification
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Mammalia
Order Rodentia
Family Erethizontidae
Genus Erethizon

Where it lives

Forests, shrublands, and tundra from Alaska and Canada through the western and northeastern United States to northern Mexico.

Native range (approximate)

What is a group of north american porcupines called?

Group name (collective noun)

A group of North American Porcupines is called a prickle.

Baby name

A baby North American Porcupine is called a porcupette.

Explore more animal collective nouns and baby animal names .

Quill defence

Quills are modified hairs with barbed tips that embed and migrate in attackers — painful and difficult to remove. Porcupines cannot shoot quills; predators must contact the raised tail. Fishers are skilled porcupine hunters, attacking the unquilled face.

Arboreal herbivore

Strong claws and rough soles let porcupines spend days in trees eating inner bark, especially in winter. Their salt craving draws them to road salt, tool handles, and plywood glue — sometimes bringing them near human structures.

Slow reproduction

Females bear a single precocial young after seven months gestation — long for a rodent. Baby porcupines ('porcupettes') have soft quills that harden within hours. Adults are solitary except during breeding.

Forest role and conflict

Porcupines girdle trees, sometimes damaging timber operations, but also create habitat for other species through bark stripping. Least Concern globally, they remain common across Canada and the western United States.

Dig deeper into the North American Porcupine

Explore the North American Porcupine

Did you know? North American Porcupine facts

  • The North American porcupine is a slow, nearsighted rodent armed with roughly 30,000 barbed quills covering its back and tail.
  • No — quills detach when touched. The porcupine swings its tail at predators, and barbed tips embed on contact.
  • Fishers are the main specialist predators, attacking the face where quills are sparse. Cougars, wolves, and bobcats occasionally succeed.
  • Yes — among the largest rodents in North America, in the family Erethizontidae, separate from Old World porcupines.
  • To feed on bark, leaves, and buds — especially in winter when ground forage is scarce.
  • Conservation: Least Concern (IUCN).

Diet & feeding

North American Porcupine feeds primarily as a herbivore — tree bark, leaves, buds, and green plants. Strong claws and rough soles let porcupines spend days in trees eating inner bark, especially in winter. Their salt craving draws them to road salt, tool handles, and plywood glue — sometimes bringing them near human st

Adaptations

  • Quills are modified hairs with barbed tips that embed and migrate in attackers — painful and difficult to remove. Porcupines cannot shoot quills; predators must contact the raised tail. Fishers are skilled porcupine hunters, attacking the unquilled face.
  • Strong claws and rough soles let porcupines spend days in trees eating inner bark, especially in winter. Their salt craving draws them to road salt, tool handles, and plywood glue — sometimes bringing them near human structures.

Behaviour & ecology

  • Quills are modified hairs with barbed tips that embed and migrate in attackers — painful and difficult to remove. Porcupines cannot shoot quills; predators must contact the raised tail. Fishers are skilled porcupine hunters, attacking the unquilled face.
  • Strong claws and rough soles let porcupines spend days in trees eating inner bark, especially in winter. Their salt craving draws them to road salt, tool handles, and plywood glue — sometimes bringing them near human structures.
  • Females bear a single precocial young after seven months gestation — long for a rodent. Baby porcupines ('porcupettes') have soft quills that harden within hours. Adults are solitary except during breeding.

Communication

  • North American Porcupine uses scent, posture, and vocal signals to mark territory and coordinate social behaviour.
  • Communication intensity often peaks during breeding seasons and territorial disputes.

Habitat & range

Forests, shrublands, and tundra across North America

Ecological role

North American Porcupine shapes vegetation through grazing or browsing and serves as prey for larger predators where ranges overlap.

Frequently asked questions about the North American Porcupine

Can porcupines shoot quills?

No — quills detach when touched. The porcupine swings its tail at predators, and barbed tips embed on contact.

What eats porcupines?

Fishers are the main specialist predators, attacking the face where quills are sparse. Cougars, wolves, and bobcats occasionally succeed.

Are porcupines rodents?

Yes — among the largest rodents in North America, in the family Erethizontidae, separate from Old World porcupines.

Why do porcupines climb trees?

To feed on bark, leaves, and buds — especially in winter when ground forage is scarce.

Are porcupines dangerous to dogs?

Very — curious dogs often receive quills in the face and mouth. Veterinary removal is usually required; quills do not dissolve.

What is a group of north american porcupines called?

A group of North American Porcupines is called a prickle.

What is a baby north american porcupine called?

A baby North American Porcupine is called a porcupette.

Sources & references

This guide is compiled and reviewed against established zoological and conservation references. Key sources for the North American Porcupine:

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