AOL: Is Your Hedgehog Foaming? It’s Not Rabies—It’s a Natural Behavior Called Self-Anointing
Is Your Hedgehog Foaming? It’s Not Rabies—It’s a Natural Behavior Called Self-Anointing
AOL: International Hedgehog Day: Simple Ways Homeowners Can Help Save a Species
MSN: What can you feed to hedgehogs? 6 safe items found in most kitchen cupboards
What can you feed to hedgehogs? 6 safe items found in most kitchen cupboards
Diet Hedgehogs are omnivores with a diverse diet that includes insects, small invertebrates, and plant materials such as roots, seeds, berries, and melons. The European hedgehog primarily feeds on earthworms, beetles, millipedes, caterpillars, earwigs, snails, slugs, and occasionally bird eggs and chicks. In contrast, hedgehogs residing in African deserts have a more varied diet adapted to ...
Discover more about Hedgehogs, the issues and threats they are facing and how you can help.
Hedgehog Hedgehogs have prickly spines everywhere except on their face, legs, and bellies. By curling into a tight ball and tucking in their heads, tail, and legs, they protect the parts of their bodies that do not have stiff, sharp spines. Often compared to pincushions, hedgehogs depend on their spines for defense—both while they sleep and when they face enemies.
hedgehog, (subfamily Erinaceinae), any of 15 Old World species of insectivores possessing several thousand short, smooth spines. Most species weigh under 700 grams (1.5 pounds), but the common western European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) can grow to 1,100 grams. Body length is 14 to 30 cm (5.5 to 12 inches), and there is a stumpy and sparsely furred tail measuring 1 to 6 cm. In addition to ...