The inexperienced cheetah has to pay the price with pointed feathers stuck across its mouth, making it painfully away from the hedgehog.

The end of the leopard when it bravely attacked the porcupine on the road running through a national park. At first, the leopard used its claws to scratch the porcupine. Seeing the prey ignoring the front, the leopard angrily followed and bit the hedgehog.

However, the leopard was stuck in its mouth with sharp porcupine feathers. It appeared to be in pain, trying to crawl past the hedgehog toward the meadow. Waiting for the hedgehog to disappear, the leopard struggled to find a way to remove each feather, then lick the wound.

Although there is evidence that leopards can have the upper hand in most porcupine confrontations, encounters of this kind are dangerous for both species. Hedgehog hunting is usually reserved for experienced predators who know how to dodge hedgehog’s formidable defenses, such as attacking the area below the spikes or protecting the head.

When threatened, hedgehogs shake their spikes to make a sound to scare away an approaching attacker. If this strategy doesn’t work, they will turn and run. Any obstacle on the road can be hit by hedgehogs.