A BIMSON'S NOOK HEDGEHOG |
Hedgehog loss comparable to tigers
Hedgehog numbers in Britain are declining by three to five per cent each year in towns and in the rural landscape
Between 2001 and 2011, records of hedgehogs in the Trust’s annual Mammals on Roads survey fell by 32 per cent; over a similar period, 2003 to 2012, records of hedgehogs in green urban and suburban spaces, documented in the yearly Living with Mammals survey, fell by 37 per cent.
The ten-year analysis of these two surveys further supports evidence highlighted in The State of Britain’s Hedgehogs that hedgehog numbers in Britain are declining dramatically. The trends show a loss as rapid as that of the world’s tigers and, in the bird world, would be given a ‘red alert’ listing.
Continuous monitoring each year is vital to help us build a more complete picture of the state of the UK’s wild mammal populations.
You can help collect further data about hedgehogs by taking part in the Hedgehog Hibernation Survey which starts on Friday 1st February. In partnership with the British Hedgehog Preservation Society (BHPS), the survey is now in its second year,and aims to find out more about the creature’s patterns of behaviour, which in turn will help inform practical conservation action.
PEOPLES TRUST FOR ENDANGERED ANIMALS
http://www.ptes.org/index.php?cat=40
LAURA
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