North American Porcupine

Photo Credit: ODFW

The North American porcupine is a large, short-legged rodent with up to 30,000 barb-tipped quills (modified hairs) covering the upper parts of the body and the dorsal and lateral surfaces of the tail. The quills are scattered among much longer, coarse guard hairs; the underfur is woolly. The quills are arranged in rows across the body, the longest quills are on the rump, the shortest on the face. The overall color of the porcupine is dark brown or blackish. The front feet have four toes, the rear feet five.

Overview

  • Species Common Name North American Porcupine
  • Species Scientific Name Erethizon dorsatum
  • State Listing Status Sensitive (pending)

Ecoregions

    Special needs

    Porcupines are typically considered diet generalists, consuming a wide range of plant species. Some more recent work suggests that porcupine should instead be classified as a facultative specialist due to its seasonal dependence on cambium and conifer needles.

    Limiting factors

    Porcupines have low reproductive potential. Individuals do not become sexually mature until 2-3 years of age. Reproduction occurs just once per year and females give birth to only one offspring, following a long gestation period.  Porcupines are vulnerable to climate change, habitat loss land use changes, barriers to animal movement, and human persecution. The species also has relatively low mobility, moving on average only a few hundred feet a day, with an average dispersal distance of 1.6 miles.

    Conservation actions

    • Address anthropogenic sources of porcupine mortality (e.g. road mortality).
    • Evaluate the classification of porcupines in Oregon (porcupines are currently classified as an unprotected mammal) and consider additional protections.

    Key reference or plan

    Oregon Connectivity Assessment and Mapping Project (OCAMP). Read here