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Hedgehog Creature Feature

Tama County Conservation’s educational hedgehog Olive pictured recently. PHOTO COURTESY OF RAINA GENAW

OTTER CREEK – Have you met Tama County Conservation’s (new!) educational hedgehog Olive? Be sure to say ‘hello’ to her at the nature center during your next trip to Otter Creek Lake & Park!

Olive is an African pygmy hedgehog which is a species native to Africa and is not an Iowa native. In Iowa, pet hedgehogs are captive-bred. Olive was adopted from the Animal Rescue League of Iowa in late 2023.

In the wild, hedgehogs eat a variety of insects, worms, snails, small animals, and carrion (roadkill). In captivity, hedgehogs like Olive are fed a special pelleted diet supplemented with cat food and are occasionally given worms, unseasoned meat, and fruit or vegetables as a treat. Olive has a keen sense of smell that she uses to find food. When she is exploring a new area, you can often hear her loudly sniffing and grunting like a pig to take in all of the new smells.

African hedgehogs are nocturnal, meaning they are mostly active at night. They prefer to live alone, without any other hedgehogs nearby. Olive spends most days burrowed underneath her log, sleeping peacefully. At night, she eats, drinks, and plays with her toys. Wild hedgehogs can run up to six miles in one night, and Olive imitates this behavior by running on her wheel for several hours each night.

When threatened, hedgehogs hiss and curl up into a ball, exposing their spiky backs to any potential enemies. Their spikes act like armor, protecting them from attackers. While porcupines also use spikes for defense, they are not closely related to hedgehogs. Close relatives of hedgehogs include moles, shrews, and moonrats.

Olive is currently on display at the Otter Creek Lake & Park Nature Center at 2283 Park Road in rural Toledo. Stop in during business hours to say hello!