‘Naked’ Porcupine Makes Stunning Comeback After Severe Mange | The Animal Rescue Site


When a Good Samaritan in Texas carried a young porcupine through the doors of Austin Wildlife Rescue, staff immediately realized this would not be a routine case. The little animal was almost unrecognizable. His quills and fur were sparse and patchy, his body was covered in thick, dry scales, and he was too exhausted to eat. Rescuers later described it as the most intense case of mange and ringworm they had ever seen in a young porcupine. For anyone who cares about wildlife rescue stories, this porcupine’s transformation from a “crusty creature” to a thriving “naked baby” is both heartbreaking and hopeful, and a perfect example of what patient, expert care can accomplish.

When the porcupine first arrived, his condition spoke volumes about how long he had been suffering. Mange and ringworm are both serious skin conditions. Together they can cause severe irritation, hair and quill loss, and significant discomfort. According to Austin Wildlife Rescue’s operations manager, Kathryn Mattison, the animal was in such rough shape that staff did not hesitate. They began medications and fluids right away to address dehydration and systemic infection. The priority was simple: stabilize him and relieve his pain.

‘Naked’ Porcupine Makes Stunning Comeback After Severe Mange | The Animal Rescue Site

Facebook/Austin Wildlife Rescue

At first, the young porcupine was too weak and tired even to eat. That kind of lethargy can be a worrying sign in any wild animal, and it underscored just how much the skin disease had taken out of him. Yet within that fragile state, staff still saw a chance. Once they confirmed the infection had not spread to his lungs, they were able to focus all of their attention on his ravaged skin.

The team at Austin Wildlife Rescue used aggressive antifungal and antiparasitic treatments to fight the mange and ringworm. Mattison explained that they rely on a combination of oral medications and topical treatments to kill the mites responsible for mange. These mites disrupt normal skin processes and lead to abnormal keratin growth, which appears as fluffy, crust-like formations across the animal’s body. On this particular porcupine, there were many of those strange, fluffy growths, a visible sign of the battle raging just beneath his skin.

Close-up of a porcupine with severe hair loss and scaly skin, sitting beside a bowl of chopped vegetables inside a rehabilitation enclosure.

Facebook/Austin Wildlife Rescue

Within days of beginning treatment, something remarkable began to happen. The thick crusts that had covered his body started to flake away. Underneath, rescuers could see healthier skin emerging. In many porcupine mange cases, staff typically need to sedate the animal to give a thorough bath, remove the growths, and clean the skin. Porcupines are naturally well defended by their quills, which makes handling them tricky. This young patient, though, was different. Mattison noted that he was able to remove the growths himself whenever he scratched, sparing him the stress of additional procedures.

Mange is notoriously itchy, so some level of scratching was expected. Even so, the speed with which the medications worked impressed the entire team. As the crusts and flakes fell away, they revealed surprisingly healthy skin below. What had once looked like a hopelessly “crusty” little body was now starting to show signs of real renewal.

Within a few weeks, the transformation grew even more striking. The flakes became fewer and farther between. The young porcupine’s expression appeared brighter, his posture stronger, his movements more confident. Mattison described watching his journey from a miserable, scaly animal into what she affectionately called a “naked baby” sporting a “killer mullet” of remaining quills along his back. On the newly cleaned skin, rescuers began to see quill stubble emerging. It was fresh regrowth, and proof that his body was finally able to heal.

Quill and fur regrowth in porcupines is a slow process, so the stubble represented the earliest signs of recovery. Still, it carried enormous emotional weight for the people who had seen him at his lowest point. Healthy skin meant less pain and less itching. With that relief came a change that many wildlife rehabilitators hope for yet never take for granted. His personality began to shine through.

Staff at Austin Wildlife Rescue describe him as “quite the ham” now. He may have arrived weak and afraid, but as his strength returned, so did his sense of play. To keep him warm in his current “naked” state, the team houses him in a large incubator. Far from being intimidated by his special accommodations, he has claimed them as his own. He reportedly likes to push his food and formula bowls over, then stretch out with his feet up, completely at ease in the space that once served as a kind of intensive care unit.

This shift from survival mode to playful mischief illustrates why mange recovery stories resonate so strongly. The visible transformation of his skin and quills mirrors a quieter emotional shift. The porcupine is no longer simply enduring constant irritation and weakness. Instead, he is exploring, relaxing, and showing his preferences, whether that means rearranging his dishes or lounging like he owns the room. I found this detail particularly striking because it highlights how medical care and compassionate handling can restore an animal’s dignity as well as its health.

For the team caring for him, the journey is not over. Mattison expects that he will need a few more weeks of ongoing antifungal and antiparasitic treatment to fully clear the infections. Even after the skin looks normal, his body is still busy repairing the damage and slowly growing new fur and quills. Veterinarians estimate it could take around a year for his coat to completely fill back in. That slow timeline is typical, yet it does not dampen anyone’s optimism. If anything, it reinforces how far he has already come in such a short time.

The long road ahead includes more than just medical milestones. A critical part of any wildlife rescue success story is the eventual goal of release. According to Mattison, the young porcupine is expected to be a candidate for release by this time next year. That means he will not only regrow his quills and fur but also develop the strength, instincts, and independence he needs to survive on his own. For now, he continues to recover under expert supervision, warm in his incubator and surrounded by people who have watched his incredible comeback from the very beginning.

This “naked porcupine” story is about more than one animal’s skin healing. It is a reminder of how quickly things can change when timely rescue, veterinary expertise, and patient care come together. From the moment he arrived at Austin Wildlife Rescue, this young porcupine had every reason to give up. Instead, supported by humans who refused to, he is rebuilding his health one flake of skin, one quill, and one mischievous bowl-tipping session at a time. Read more at