Rothschild's porcupine

Rothschild's porcupine

Andean porcupine, Quichua porcupine

Kingdom
Phylum
Subphylum
Class
Order
Subfamily
Genus
SPECIES
Coendou rothschildi

The Andean porcupine (Coendou quichua ) or Quichua porcupine is a species of rodent in the family Erethizontidae. It is found in the Andes of northern Ecuador and Colombia as well as in Panama. This porcupine is little known, but is probably arboreal, nocturnal and solitary like its relatives. The species is thought to be uncommon to rare and the population decreasing. It is threatened by deforestation, habitat fragmentation and agriculture.

Appearance

The Andean porcupine is a medium-sized porcupine with a head-and-body length of between 332 and 420 mm (13.1 and 16.5 in) and a tail length of between 290 and 413 mm (11.4 and 16.3 in). A fully grown adult weighs in the region of 2 kg (4 lb). The nose is pink and large, and the eyes are small. The body is spiny all over, the evenly spaced spines being dark with yellowish tips in the animal's mid section. The tail tapers from a broad base and is prehensile. This porcupine could be confused with the Mexican hairy dwarf porcupine (Sphiggurus mexicanus ), but that species has long black hair which largely conceals the spines while the Andean is more obviously spiny.

Distribution

Geography

Biogeographical realms
Rothschild's porcupine habitat map

Biome

Rothschild's porcupine habitat map
Rothschild's porcupine
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Habits and Lifestyle

The ecology of this species is little known. Its behaviour is likely to resemble that of its close relatives in being nocturnal and arboreal, and feeding on fruit and leaves.

Lifestyle

Population

Population number

The Andean porcupine is listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as "data deficient". This is because of its uncertain taxonomic status as well as the lack of recent information on its abundance, the threats it faces and its needs. It is generally an uncommon or rare species and it is suspected that its population is decreasing, due to degradation and fragmentation of its habitat as the forest is felled for conversion to agricultural use.

References

1. Rothschild's porcupine Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rothschild's_porcupine
2. Rothschild's porcupine on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/136702/22214415

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