There are so many hedgehog colors that it can be hard to know where to start! Learn about the different types of colors and classes in our simple guide. The eight common hedgehog color categories include salt and pepper, white-bellied, white, snowflake, Algerian, black, pinto, and albino hedgehogs. From jet black to pure white, there's a hedgehog for everyone.
But what do all of those colors mean? And why do hedgehogs change color anyway? This guide will answer all of your questions about hedgehog colors and explain what each one means. Using the traditional color chart, it can be very difficult to match hedgehogs to the exact color name. For example, most people can not tell the difference between an apricot and a champagne, or a brown, cinnamon, and dark cinnacot.
*Hedgehogs can only be accurately identified on the color spectrum when they are full grown (around 6 months). Originally White Bellied and Algerian distinctions were actual color differences, back. A guide to hedgehog colors, quill patterns, and facial markings.
Before we start to show you our hedgehog COLORS we would like to discuss the complex issue of hedgehog color classification. During the relatively short period of time that hedgehogs have been kept as pets, many groups and individuals have endeavored to formally classify all of these colors. Pygmy hedgehogs, having been domesticated for several decades now, come in a whole range of different colours and patterns, some more common than others, and ranging all the way to the pink eyed, pure white albino to the dark Algerian black and everything in between.
I've made this simple guide to help with identification. HEDGEHOGS COME IN A VARIETY OF DIFFERENT COLORS, PATTERNS AND MASKS, BELOW IS A GUIDE TO IDENTIFYING YOUR HEDGEHOG'S COLOR! *PLEASE NOTE, THERE TEND TO BE DIFFERENT NAMES FOR THE SAME COLOR, HOWEVER THE ONES WE HAVE LISTED ARE THE MOST ACCURATE AND COMMONLY USED WITH US AND FELLOW BREEDERS THROUGHOUT THE US AND CANADA! Today, we'll dive into the vibrant world of hedgehog colors, enlightening you on their fashionable quills, discussing their unique varieties, and maybe, just maybe, inspiring you to think about how your future hedgehog can become the trendsetter of your heart. Spoiler alert: they always end up winning because, come on, it's a hedgehog! Snowflake Color Chart Snowflake coloring is when the hedgehog has spines that are a fairly even mix of banded and non-banded.
There are usually 30%-70% all white spines, with 50% being the ideal. They look like they got snowed on, and thus the name "snowflake". All snowflake colorings are a recessive variation of the dominant colors.