Hedgehog listed as an endangered species for the first time

Published: Monday, Oct 28th 2024, 17:20

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According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the number of hedgehogs in Western Europe is in sharp decline. It has therefore classified the hibernator as "potentially endangered" for the first time in its Red List of Threatened Species.

According to the IUCN, humans are the problem. "In particular, the destruction of rural habitats through intensification of agriculture, roads and urban development is leading to a decline in the Western European hedgehog," it says. Hedgehogs need to be better protected.

The Western European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) is found in Switzerland, Germany, France, Great Britain, Spain and parts of Scandinavia, among other places. Over the past ten years, the number has declined by between 16 and 33 percent, depending on the country. There is no reliable information on the total number of hedgehogs. Hedgehogs usually only have offspring once a year.

Seven hazard levels

"Potentially endangered" is level two of the seven-level scale used by the IUCN to assess endangerment. The scale ranges from "not endangered" to "extinct". The Red List has been in existence since 1964 and now includes more than 166,000 animal and plant species, of which a good 46,000 are endangered.

©Keystone/SDA

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