There is no way! It's devils club!
the devil club in touching spirit bear is a type of thorny planet
Echidnas have thick, insulating fur with many spines for protection. It isn't really spiny skin.
Remove what you can with a pair of tweezers. This will leave embedded fragments, but cover the area with heavy duty duct tape for a few days, replacing when necessary. The skin will soften and the fragments migrate to the surface when they can easily be removed. Worked very well in getting about a dozen spines from my foot. Tony Brown, Stockport, UK.
It poofs up with large spines emerging from its skin.
Monotremes are covered with skin, but over the skin they have fur. Both platypuses and echidnas have fur, and echidnas also has sharp spines.
used for breathing. they stickout through bony spines on the starfish.
Spines of the sea urchin can cause injuries of the skin.
Thick skin. Ability to drop and regrow lost appendages. Sharp spines that grow from plates underneath the skin.
Thorny devils have sandy coloured skin to enable them to camouflage in their habitat. This offers extra protection for what is a slow-moving and otherwise defenceless lizard. Thorny devils can actually change the colour of their skin to match their environment: therefore, some may appear sandy coloured, while others are darker.
Ray finned fish have webs of skin supported by bony or horny spines. These spines are called rays. Goldfish have these types of fins.
Both have spines (vertebrates) and skin (underneath the fur or feathers).
* im not sure but i think the answer is bony spines protruding from the body with skin covering them