Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚠馃嚬 Italy

The crested porcupine

Italy's largest rodent, covered in spikes longer than a pencil

A crested porcupine with long black-and-white quills

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The crested porcupine is a big, plump rodent covered in long black-and-white quills - some of them up to 30 centimetres long. That is roughly the length of a school ruler. They are the biggest rodent in Italy, weighing as much as a small dog (up to 27 kg).

Tell me more

A porcupine's quills are actually a special kind of hair, made of the same stuff as your fingernails - keratin. The quills are hollow, which makes them light, and very sharp. Normally they lie flat against the porcupine's body. But if anything scares the porcupine, the quills stand straight up and the porcupine looks twice as big.

Crested porcupines do not 'shoot' their quills, even though some old stories say they do. Instead, if a predator gets too close, the porcupine reverses into them with the quills raised. The quills come out easily, and a hungry predator usually goes home with a faceful of spikes and a strong lesson learned: don't bother that animal.

Porcupines spend the day asleep in burrows that they dig themselves. Their burrows can be huge - a network of tunnels and rooms going down two or three metres. They come out at night to look for food. They mostly eat roots, bulbs, fruit, bark and the bones of dead animals, which they chew on to get calcium for their quills.

Crested porcupines used to live mainly in Africa. Long ago, possibly with the help of the Romans, they spread north into Italy, and they have lived here ever since. Today you can find their tracks - and sometimes their dropped quills - in many Italian woods.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might it be useful to have quills that fall out easily when something pushes against them?
  2. 02Lots of animals have a way of looking bigger when they are scared. What others can you think of?
  3. 03Porcupines come out at night. What other animals are 'nocturnal'? Why might that work for them?
Try this

Classroom activity

Each child draws a porcupine and adds at least 30 quills. On each quill, write one thing that protects them in real life (a bike helmet, a kind friend, a warm coat, a routine before bed). Display the porcupines. Discuss: what makes a good 'quill'?

More about Italy

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