Indian crested porcupine

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Indian crested porcupine
File:Hystrix indica (Indian Crested Porcupine) at IG Zoological park, Visakhapatnam 03.JPG
Scientific classification
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H. indica
Binomial name
Hystrix indica
Kerr, 1792

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The Indian crested porcupine (Hystrix indica), or Indian porcupine, is a large species of Hystricomorph rodent (order Rodentia) belonging to the Old World porcupine family, Hystricidae.[1] It is native to southern Asia and the Middle East.[1]

Description

The Indian crested porcupine is a large rodent, weighing 11–18 kg.[2] Their body (from the nose to the base of the tail) measures between 70–90 cm, with the tail adding an additional 8–10 cm.[3] The lifespan of wild Indian crested porcupines is unknown, but the oldest known captive individual was a female that lived to be 27.1 years old.[2]

It is covered in multiple layers of modified hair called quills, with longer, thinner quills covering a layer of shorter, thicker ones.[2] The quills are brown or black with alternating white and black bands.[4] They are made of keratin and are relatively flexible.[4] Each quill is connected to a muscle at its base, allowing the porcupine to raise its quills when it feels threatened.[4] The longest quills are located on the neck and shoulder, where the quills form a "skirt" around the animal.[4] These quills can grow up to 51 cm (20 in) long,[4] with most measuring between 15–30 cm.[5] Smaller (20 cm) and more rigid quills are packed densely on the back and rump.[4] These smaller quills are used to stab at potential threats.[4] The base of the tail contains shorter quills that appear white in color, with longer, hollow quills that the porcupine can rattle to produce a warning sound when threatened.[6] Contrary to popular belief, Indian crested porcupines (like all porcupines) cannot shoot their quills.[4]

The Indian crested porcupine has a stocky build with a low surface area to volume ratio, which aids in heat conservation.[7] It has broad hands and feet with long claws used for burrowing.[2] Like all porcupines, the Indian crested porcupine has a good sense of smell and sharp, chisel-like incisors.[4]

Habitat and Distribution

File:Hystrix indica.jpg
Indian crested porcupine on a rocky hillside

Indian crested porcupines are found throughout southwest and central Asia and in parts of the Middle East,[2] including Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, China, Georgia, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Nepal, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and Yemen.[1] Due to their flexible environmental tolerances, Indian crested porcupines occupy a broad range of habitats.[1] They prefer rocky hillsides,[2] but are also common in tropical and temperate shrub-lands, grasslands, forests, plantations, and gardens.[1] Their range seems to be limited by seasonal densities of forage and the availability of suitable substrates for digging burrows.[8] More specifically, the northern range of the Indian crested porcupine is limited by minimum summer night duration: they do not occur above latitudes where minimum night duration is less than 7 hours, presumably because of the amount of foraging time required to meet their dietary needs.[9]

Diet

File:Indian Crested Porcupine.JPG
A captive Hystrix indica eating plant material

Indian crested porcupines have a very broad and mostly herbivorous diet.[2] They consume a variety of natural and agricultural plant material, including roots, bulbs, fruits, grains, and tubers, along with insects and small vertebrates.[2][3][10][11][12] Because they are cecal digesters, they are able to exploit low quality forage.[13] They have also been known to chew on bones to acquire minerals, such as calcium, that aid in quill growth.[3][5] Their capability to form substantial fat reserves is a useful adaptation for living in seasonally fluctuating habitats.[7]

These porcupines can act as substantial habitat modifiers when excavating for tubers.[14][15] They are also considered serious agricultural pests in many parts of their range due to their taste for agricultural crops.[9][16] For these reasons, they are often regarded as a nuisance.[1]

Behavior

Like other Old World porcupines, the Indian crested porcupine is nocturnal.[2] Both adults and weaned juveniles spend an average of 7 hours foraging every night.[9][17][18] They tend to avoid moonlight in the winter months, which could be a strategy to evade predation.[17] However, during summer months they do not avoid moonlight (likely because there are less dark hours during which to forage) but instead tend to stay closer to their dens.[17] During the day, they remain in their dens,[18][19] but throughout the winter they will occasionally emerge from their dens during daylight hours to bask in the sun.[7]

The Indian crested porcupine is semi-fossorial.[2] They live in natural caves or in excavated burrows.[18][19] Because they do not climb or jump well, they spend most of their life on or under the ground.[4] However, they are good swimmers.[4]

Predators of the Indian crested porcupine include large cats,[20][21] caracals, wolves, striped hyenas, and humans.[17] When excited or scared, a porcupine will stand its quills up to appear larger.[4] It can also rattle the hollow quills at the base of its tail, stomp its feet, growl, grunt, or charge backward into the threat.[4]

Reproduction

Indian crested porcupines mate in February and March.[22] Gestation lasts an average of 240 days.[5] A female gives birth to one brood of 2-4 offspring per year.[3] Young are born with open eyes and are covered in short, soft quills that harden within a few hours after birth.[2] Young are fully weaned 13–19 weeks after birth, but remain in the den with parents and siblings until sexual maturity at around 2 years of age.[22] The Indian crested porcupine is usually monogamous, and both parents live in the den with their offspring throughout the year.[2]

Conservation

Due to its adaptability to a wide range of habitats and food types, the Indian crested porcupine is listed by the IUCN as Least Concern as of 2008.[1][2] Populations are stable and not severely fragmented, and while population status varies across its range, in many places it is common enough to be considered a pest.[1] However, as a result of urbanization, infrastructure development, and pesticide use, suitable porcupine habitat is currently declining.[2]

The Indian crested porcupine is protected under the India Schedule IV of the Indian Wildlife Protection Act of 1972, amended up to 2002.[2] Nonetheless, because they are destructive to gardens and agricultural crops, porcupines are widely hunted.[5][23] There exists a large trade of these porcupines for consumption and medicinal use.[2] Despite being considered a pest, Indian crested porcupines play an important role in spreading seeds and pollen.[2]

File:Hystrix indica.JPG
Hystrix indica in a trap

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Amori, G., Hutterer, R., Kryštufek, B., Yigit, N., Mitsain, G. & Muñoz, L. J. P. (2008). Hystrix indica. In: IUCN 2008. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
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