fbpx
Wikipedia

European hedgehog

The European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus), also known as the West European hedgehog or common hedgehog, is a hedgehog species native to Europe from Iberia and Italy northwards into Scandinavia and westwards into the British Isles.[3] It is a generally common and widely distributed species that can survive across a wide range of habitat types. It is a well-known species, and a favourite in European gardens, both for its endearing appearance and its preference for eating a range of garden pests. While populations are currently stable across much of its range, it is declining severely in Great Britain[2] where it is now Red Listed,[4] meaning that it is considered to be at risk of local extinction. Outside its native range, the species was introduced to New Zealand during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

European hedgehog
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene–Recent
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Eulipotyphla
Family: Erinaceidae
Genus: Erinaceus
Species:
E. europaeus[1]
Binomial name
Erinaceus europaeus[1]
Range including introductions
Native range of European hedgehog

Description edit

 
Skeleton of a European hedgehog
 
Skull of a European hedgehog

The European hedgehog has a generalised body structure with unspecialised limb girdles.[5] It appears brownish with most of its body covered by up to 6000 brown and white spines.[6] The length of head and body is ~160 mm (6 in) at weaning, increasing to 260 mm (10 in) or more in large adults. It has an extremely short tail as an almost vestigial feature, typically 20 to 30 mm (0.8 to 1.2 in).[7] Weight increases from around 120 g (4 oz) at weaning to > 1100 g (40 oz) in adulthood. The maximum recorded weight is 2000 g (70 oz), though few wild specimens exceed 1600 g (55 oz) even in autumn.[5] Adult summer weight is typically somewhat less than in autumn, with an average of around 800 g (28 oz) and adult weights commonly as low as 500 g (18 oz).[8] Males tend to be slightly larger than females, but sex differences in body weight are overshadowed by enormous seasonal variation.[7]

The European hedgehog is unlike any other creature across most of its range. Where it co-exists with the northern white-breasted hedgehog (Erinaceus roumanicus), the two species are difficult to distinguish in the field, the latter having a white spot on its chest.[2] It is probably the largest hedgehog species and is possibly the heaviest member of the order Erinaceomorpha.[9]

Colour variation edit

 
Blonde hedgehog

Leucistic or "blonde" hedgehogs occasionally occur. Such specimens are believed to have a pair of rare recessive genes, giving rise to their black eyes and creamy-coloured spines; however, they are not strictly speaking albino. They are extremely rare, except on North Ronaldsay and the Channel Island of Alderney where around 25% of the population is thought to be blonde.[10] True albino morphs of the hedgehog occur infrequently.[6]

Behaviour and ecology edit

European hedgehog anointing itself

The European hedgehog is largely nocturnal. It has a hesitant gait, frequently stopping to smell the air. Unlike the smaller, warmer-climate species, the European hedgehog may hibernate in the winter. However, most wake at least once to move their nests.[11]

Diet edit

 
A European hedgehog eating fish carcass, photographed in Altai Krai
 
A European hedgehog eating fallen fruits
European hedgehog foraging in hedgerow

The European hedgehog is an insectivore. Its diet consists largely of earthworms, as well as snails and slugs, beetles, ants, bees and wasps, earwigs, cockroaches, crickets and grasshoppers, butterflies and moths, and caterpillars and other insect larvae.[12] Eggs of ground-nesting birds are also taken, and carcasses may be foraged on. Hedgehogs may also eat lizards, snakes, frogs, and small rodents.[12] Plant matter appears to make up only a negligible part of the hedgehog's diet.[13][14][15]

Breeding edit

 
A one-day-old newborn European hedgehog
 
A female with one young

The breeding season commences after hibernation. Pregnancies peak between May and July, though they have been recorded as late as September. Gestation is 31 to 35 days. The female alone raises the litter which typically numbers between four and six, though can range from two to ten. Studies have indicated that litter size may increase in more northern climes. The young are born blind with a covering of small spines. By the time they are 36 hours old, the second, outer coat of spines begins to sprout. By 11 days they can roll into a ball. Weaning occurs at around six weeks of age.[16]

Longevity and mortality edit

European hedgehogs may live to more than ten years of age, although the average life expectancy is three years. Starvation is the most common cause of death, usually occurring during hibernation. If alarmed, the animal will roll into a ball to protect itself. Many potential predators are repelled by its spines, but predation does occur. Remains of hedgehogs have been found in the stomachs of red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), European badgers (Meles meles) and pine martens (Martes martes). A large portion of these may be from hedgehog carcasses, especially roadkill. However, hedgehogs tend to be absent from areas where badgers are numerous.

 
A pellet made by owl, with hair and spikes of hedgehog

Eurasian eagle-owls (Bubo bubo) and golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) are the only regular avian predators of this species and may even prefer them as prey. The owl, after grabbing the hedgehog by its face, tends to skin the mammal's prickly back with its talons before consumption, resulting in several hedgehog backs being found around eagle-owl roosts and nests.[17] In Spain, reduction of European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) numbers due to rabbit haemorrhagic disease has made the European hedgehog one of the top preferred prey species for eagle-owls.[18] Elsewhere, eagle-owls often prefer these hedgehogs to any other prey species, as the hedgehog can comprise up to 23% by number and 30.7% by biomass of eagle-owl prey remains.[19][20][21] On the Swedish island of Gotland the golden eagle may take larger numbers of hedgehogs than any other prey due to an otherwise low diversity of native land mammals, although the introduction of European rabbits has shifted the eagle's prey preferences there.[22]

Distribution and habitat edit

The European hedgehog is native to Europe (including European Russia), with a global distribution extending from the British Isles and the Iberian Peninsula eastwards through much of western to central Europe, and from southern Fennoscandia and the northern Baltic to north-west Russia. It is present also on Mediterranean islands (Corsica, Sardinia, Elba, Sicily), on most of the French Atlantic islands as well as on British Islands (autochthonous and introduced).[23] It is an invasive exotic species in New Zealand and has probably been introduced to Ireland and many of the smaller islands where it occurs.[24]

Colonists took hedgehogs from England and Scotland to New Zealand on sailing ships from the 1860s to the 1890s mainly as a biological control against agricultural pests or as a pet.[25] Few survived the ca 50–100 days voyage,[25] but those that did had lost all their fleas. Animals found their first homes in the South Island, where their spread was helped by guards dropping them off at country railway stations. Hedgehogs were introduced to the North Island in the 1890s, but some were also transported from South Island between 1906 and 1911[25] and, from then on, their numbers increased at an exponential rate. By the 1920s they had become so numerous that game-bird hunters blamed them for reduced bag-sizes. Hedgehogs were declared noxious animals and a bounty of one shilling a snout paid by regional authorities for several years. By the 1950s, hedgehogs could be found over the whole country with the exception of the coldest wettest corner of the South Island and alpine areas of permanent snow. Nevertheless, hedgehogs have been seen climbing New Zealand glaciers. Hedgehogs do not reach the same weight in New Zealand as in colder parts of Europe. With its milder winters, New Zealand hedgehogs hibernate for only three months of the year so do not need to put on so much weight in autumn as their ancestors. In northern New Zealand, many hedgehogs do not hibernate at all. One of New Zealand's pioneer hedgehogs probably had faulty teeth for this feature is found in about 50% of today's animals. Most New Zealanders welcome hedgehogs in their gardens as they relish slugs and snails. Conservationists are less happy as hedgehogs compete for invertebrate food with native bush birds and prey on some rare insects, lizards and ground-nesting birds. As a result, extensive hedgehog-control programs are under way in some parts of the country, killing thousands of them. To judge by roadkill counts, North Island hedgehogs were at their highest numbers in the 1950s. Since then, roadkill counts have fallen dramatically from about 50/100 km to less than 1/100 km.[26]

 
Hedgehog in autumn in its nest under a bush in Brastad, Sweden

The European hedgehog is found across a wide range of habitat types, encompassing both semi-natural vegetation types and those areas that have been heavily modified by man. The range includes woodland, grasslands such as meadows and pasture, arable land, orchards and vineyards as well as within the matrix of habitat types found in human settlements. It prefers lowlands and hills up to 400–600m, but is also locally present on mountains, exceptionally up to an altitude of 1500–2000m (e.g. Alps and Pyrenees).[27] Outside cultivated land it prefers marginal zones of forests, particularly ecotonal grass and scrub vegetation.[27]

Hedgehogs are most abundant within the gardens, parks and amenity land close to or within human settlements.[28] They are generally scarce in areas of coniferous woodland, marshes and moorland, probably because of a lack of suitable sites and materials for the construction of winter nests (or hibernacula), which have specific requirements.[6]

Conservation edit

Generally, the hedgehog is widely distributed and can be found in good numbers where people are tolerant of their residence in gardens. To date, the IUCN classifies the species as Least Concern and currently the population as Stable. In some areas, they are common victims of road kills and may be hunted by dogs, such as in Sardinia.[2] On 28 August 2007, the new Biodiversity Action Plan included the European hedgehog on the list of species and habitats in Britain that need conservation and greater protection.[29][30]

In Denmark and Poland, the European hedgehog is protected by law. It is illegal to capture or hurt them, but rehabilitation of unhealthy hedgehogs is accepted.[31][32] It is protected in all European countries which have signed the Berne Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats.

A low coverage assembly of the genome of Erinaceus europaeus was released by the Broad Institute in June 2006 as part of the Mammalian Genome Project.[33]

Status in Great Britain edit

Population size edit

An estimate of 36.5 million by Burton[34] was based on extrapolating up from a density of 2.5 animals/ha (one per acre), but this was based on limited data and is probably an overestimate. A more recent estimate of 1,550,000 in Great Britain[35] (England 1,100,000, Scotland 310,000, Wales 140,000) is more reliable, but still has a high degree of uncertainty as it is based on very limited information about hedgehog density estimates for different habitat types.[3] Given this figure, and more firmly established rates of decline,[36] it is now thought likely that there are fewer than a million hedgehogs in Great Britain.[37] In the UK badgers are the main predator of hedgehogs,[38][39] and also compete for some of the same foods. Badger numbers have increased substantially in recent years due to increased legal protection, and increased predation by badgers may well be a major cause of declining hedgehog numbers in England.

Population status edit

In 2007 the hedgehog was classified a Biodiversity Action Plan "priority" species in Britain, largely in response to negative trends identified in national surveys such as Mammals on Roads survey,[40] run by People's Trust for Endangered Species (PTES), that found an annual decline in counts of road casualties of around 7% from 2001 to 2004.[41][42] Historic data from the National Gamebag Census suggest a steady decline between 1960 and 1980.[43] Evidence from a questionnaire in 2005 and 2006 also supported an ongoing decline, with almost half of ~20,000 participants in PTES' Hogwatch survey[44] reporting the impression that there were fewer hedgehogs than there were five years earlier.[45]

A review of the available survey data for the population trend of the hedgehog in Britain was undertaken by the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) in a report commissioned by PTES and the British Hedgehog Preservation Society (BHPS).[36] This concluded that, at a conservative estimate, 25% of the British hedgehog population had been lost in a decade.[46] The report also highlighted the importance of long-term monitoring to provide datasets with sufficient power to allow the changes to the population to be identified. Currently, the most important monitoring programmes involved in collecting information about the status of the British hedgehog population are PTES’ Mammals on Roads and Living with Mammals surveys, and the BTO Breeding Bird Survey and Garden BirdWatch survey.[47] A recent review of these surveys now suggests that rural populations have declined by at least a half and urban populations by up to a third since 2000.[48]

Pest status edit

This species has become a serious pest in areas where it has been introduced outside of its native range. One such location is the Western Isles of Scotland, where introduced hedgehogs eat the eggs of ground-nesting waders such as common snipe, dunlin, common redshank and northern lapwing. It is also considered a pest in New Zealand where it preys upon various native fauna,[49] including insects, snails, lizards and ground-nesting birds, particularly shore birds.[50] As with many introduced animals, it lacks natural predators.

Attempts to eliminate hedgehogs from bird colonies on the Scottish islands of North Uist and Benbecula in the Outer Hebrides were met with international outrage. Eradication began in 2003 with 690 hedgehogs being killed. Animal welfare groups attempted rescues to save the hedgehogs. By 2007, legal injunctions against the killing of hedgehogs were put in place. In 2008, the elimination process was changed from killing the hedgehogs to trapping them and releasing them on the mainland.[51]

In popular culture edit

  • From the early 1950s until the 1980s, the hedgehog was sometimes seen as an unofficial symbol of NATO in numerous countries, as it represented a peaceful animal that bristles in defence.[52]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hutterer, R. (2005). "Order Erinaceomorpha". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 214. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  2. ^ a b c d Amori, G. (2016). "Erinaceus europaeus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T29650A2791303. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T29650A2791303.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b Harris, S. & Yalden, D.W. (2008). Mammals of the British Isles: Handbook, 4th Edition. The Mammal Society, Southampton.
  4. ^ "Hedgehogs and water voles face extinction in new Red List for British mammals". www.nhm.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-03-12.
  5. ^ a b Reeve, N. (1994). Hedgehogs. T. & A.D. Poyser. p. 7.
  6. ^ a b c Morris, P. A. (2006). The New Hedgehog Book. Whittet Books, London.
  7. ^ a b Harris, S. & Yalden, D.W. (2008). Mammals of the British Isles: Handbook, 4th edition. Mammal Society, Southampton. pp.241-249.
  8. ^ Dickman, C. R. (1988). "Age-related dietary change in European hedgehog, Erinaceus europaeus". Journal of Zoology. 215: 1–14. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1988.tb04881.x.
  9. ^ Wood, G. (1983). The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats. ISBN 978-0-85112-235-9.
  10. ^ Morris, P. A. & Tutt, A. (1996). "Leucistic hedgehogs on the island of Alderney". Journal of Zoology. 239 (2): 387–389. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1996.tb05458.x.
  11. ^ Haigh, A.; O’Riordan, R. M.; Butler, F. (2012). "Nesting behaviour and seasonal body mass changes in a rural Irish population of the Western hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus)". Acta Theriologica. 57 (4): 321–331. doi:10.1007/s13364-012-0080-2. S2CID 18568953.
  12. ^ a b Roberts, Colin (2011). "Erinaceus europaeus European hedgehog". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  13. ^ Gimmel, A.; Eulenberger, U.; Liesegang, A. (2021). "Feeding the European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus L.)—risks of commercial diets for wildlife". Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition. 105: 91–96. doi:10.1111/jpn.13561. PMID 34247429. S2CID 235797644.
  14. ^ Hubert, P.; Julliard, R.; Biagianti, S.; Poulle, M. L. (2011). "Ecological factors driving the higher hedgehog (Erinaceus europeaus) density in an urban area compared to the adjacent rural area". Landscape and Urban Planning. 103 (1): 34–43. doi:10.1016/j.landurbplan.2011.05.010.
  15. ^ Jones, C.; Moss, K.; Sanders, M. (2005). "Diet of hedgehogs (Erinaceus europaeus) in the upper Waitaki Basin, New Zealand: implications for conservation". New Zealand Journal of Ecology. 29 (1): 29–35. JSTOR 24056190.
  16. ^ The Encyclopedia of Mammals. Oxford University Press. 2010. p. 431. ISBN 9780199567997.
  17. ^ by Konig, Weick & Becking (2009). Owls of the World Yale University Press. ISBN 0300142277
  18. ^ Antonio Martínez, J., & Zuberogoitia, I. (2001). The response of the Eagle Owl (Bubo bubo) to an outbreak of the rabbit haemorrhagic disease. Journal für Ornithologie, 142(2), 204-211.
  19. ^ Laursen, J. T. (1999). Fødevalg hos Stor Hornugle Bubo bubo i Danmark. Dansk Orn. Foren. Tidsskr 93:141-144.
  20. ^ Leditznig, C., Leditznig, W., & Gossow, H. (2001). 15 Jahre Untersuchungen am Uhu (Bubo bubo) im Mostviertel Niederösterreichs-Stand und Entwicklungstendenzen. Egretta, 44: 45-73.
  21. ^ Geidel, C. (2012). Entwicklung neuartiger Schutzkonzepte für den Uhu (Bubo bubo) -Abschlussbericht 2012. Gutachten (DBU-Projekt).
  22. ^ Tjernberg, M. (1981). Diet of the golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos during the breeding season in Sweden. Ecography 4(1):12-19.
  23. ^ Mitchell-Jones, A.J.; Amori, G.; Bogdanowicz, W.; Krystufek, B.; Reijnders, P.J.H.; Spitzenberger, F.; Stubbe, M.; Thissen, J.B.M.; Vohralik, V.; Zima, J. (1999). The atlas of European mammals. Poyser London.
  24. ^ Harris, S. & Yalden, D.W. (2008). Mammals of the British Isles: Handbook, 4th edition. Mammal Society, Southampton. pp.38-39.
  25. ^ a b c Pipek, P.; Pyšek, P.; Bacher, S.; Černá B., B.; Hulme, P. E. (2020). "Independent introductions of hedgehogs to the North and South Island of New Zealand". New Zealand Journal of Ecology. 44 (1): 3396. doi:10.20417/nzjecol.44.7.
  26. ^ King, C. M.; Carolyn, M.; Barrett, P. (2005). The handbook of New Zealand mammals (Second ed.). South Melbourne, Vic.: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-558477-5. OCLC 64401930.
  27. ^ a b Mitchell-Jones, A.J.; Amori, G.; Bogdanowicz, W.; Krystufek, B.; Reijnders, P.J.H.; Spitzenberger, F.; Stubbe, M.; Thissen, J.B.M.; Vohralik, V.; Zima, J. (1999). The atlas of European mammals. Poyser London. pp.38-39.
  28. ^ Young, R. P; Davison, J.; Trewby, I. D.; Wilson, G. J.; Delahay, R. J. & Doncaster, C. P. (2006). "Abundance of hedgehogs (Erinaceus europaeus) in relation to the density and distribution of badgers (Meles meles)". Journal of Zoology. 269 (3): 349–356. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.2006.00078.x.
  29. ^ "Hedgehogs join 'protection' list". BBC News. 2007. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  30. ^ . Biodiversity Action Plan. ukbap.org.uk
  31. ^ Pindsvin 2012-03-30 at the Wayback Machine. The Forest and Nature Department of DenMark
  32. ^ Dz.U. 2004 nr 220 poz. 2237. Internetowy System Aktów Prawnych. Isap.sejm.gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved on 2012-12-29.
  33. ^ "Hedgehog". Ensembl Genome Browser. Retrieved 11 June 2007.
  34. ^ Burton, M. (1969). The Hedgehog: A Survival Book on Hedgehogs. London. Andre Deutsch.
  35. ^ Harris, S., Morris, P., Wray, S. and Yalden, D. (1995) A review of British mammals: population estimates and conservation status of British mammals other than cetaceans. JNCC, Peterborough.
  36. ^ a b Roos, S., Johnston, A. and Noble, D. (2012) UK hedgehog datasets and their potential for long-term monitoring. BTO Research Report No. 598.
  37. ^ Vaughan, Adam (29 January 2013) "Hedgehog population in dramatic decline" Guardian Online Retrieved 4 September 2013.
  38. ^ "Briefing Sheet: Badgers and hedgehogs". 14 December 2021.
  39. ^ "Are Badgers to Blame for Declining Hedgehogs? - Conservation Articles & Blogs - CJ".
  40. ^ Mammals on Roads survey, PTES: more information.
  41. ^ Bright, P., George, L. and Balmforth, Z. (2005). Mammals on Roads: development and testing the use of road counts to monitor abundance (draft v. 9). A report to PTES/JNCC.
  42. ^ JNCC "priority" species pages: Erinaceus europaeus.
  43. ^ Tapper, S. (1992) An Ecological Review from Shooting and Gamekeeping Records. Game Heritage. Game Conservancy Ltd.
  44. ^ Hogwatch[permanent dead link]Survey Report, PTES and BHPS. 2012-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Hof, A.R. (2009). A study of the current status of the hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) and its decline in Great Britain since 1960. PhD. Royal Holloway, University of London. Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, UK.
  46. ^ Wembridge, David. "The State of Britain's Hedgehogs 2011" (PDF). People's Trust for Endangered Species. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  47. ^ Battersby, J. (2005). UK Mammals: Species Status and Population Trends. A report by the Tracking Mammals Partnership No. 1, JNCC/Tracking Mammals Partnership, Peterborough.
  48. ^ Wembridge, David. "The State of Britain's Hedgehogs 2015" (PDF). People's Trust for Endangered Species. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
  49. ^ King, Carolyn (1985). Immigrant Killers: Introduced Predators and the Conservation of Birds in New Zealand. Auckland: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-558115-7.
  50. ^ . Landcare Research media release. 17 September 2003. Archived from the original on 2003-10-01. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  51. ^ Ross, David (14 January 2009). "18 Trappers Sought for Hebrides to Protect Birds from Hedgehogs". The Herald. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  52. ^ THE HEDGEHOG: NATO’S LOST SYMBOL?, North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, published 20.10.2016, retrieved 16.02.2021.

Further reading edit

  • Macdonald, David W. & Priscilla Barrett Mammals of Europe Princeton University Press (1993), ISBN 0-691-09160-9
  • Warwick, Hugh (2010). A Prickly Affair: The charm of the hedgehog. Penguin. ISBN 978-0141034294

External links edit

  • Hedgehog Street UK conservation campaign
  • Photographs and Videos
  • WildlifeOnline Natural History of the European Hedgehog
  • Hedgehog in the night (photographs)
  • View the hedgehog genome on Ensembl
  • View the eriEur2 genome assembly in the UCSC Genome Browser.

european, hedgehog, erinaceus, europaeus, also, known, west, common, hedgehog, hedgehog, species, native, europe, from, iberia, italy, northwards, into, scandinavia, westwards, into, british, isles, generally, common, widely, distributed, species, that, surviv. The European hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus also known as the West European hedgehog or common hedgehog is a hedgehog species native to Europe from Iberia and Italy northwards into Scandinavia and westwards into the British Isles 3 It is a generally common and widely distributed species that can survive across a wide range of habitat types It is a well known species and a favourite in European gardens both for its endearing appearance and its preference for eating a range of garden pests While populations are currently stable across much of its range it is declining severely in Great Britain 2 where it is now Red Listed 4 meaning that it is considered to be at risk of local extinction Outside its native range the species was introduced to New Zealand during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries European hedgehogTemporal range Middle Pleistocene Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Conservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder EulipotyphlaFamily ErinaceidaeGenus ErinaceusSpecies E europaeus 1 Binomial nameErinaceus europaeus 1 Linnaeus 1758Range including introductionsNative range of European hedgehog Contents 1 Description 1 1 Colour variation 2 Behaviour and ecology 2 1 Diet 2 2 Breeding 2 3 Longevity and mortality 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Conservation 5 Status in Great Britain 5 1 Population size 5 2 Population status 6 Pest status 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDescription edit nbsp Skeleton of a European hedgehog nbsp Skull of a European hedgehogThe European hedgehog has a generalised body structure with unspecialised limb girdles 5 It appears brownish with most of its body covered by up to 6000 brown and white spines 6 The length of head and body is 160 mm 6 in at weaning increasing to 260 mm 10 in or more in large adults It has an extremely short tail as an almost vestigial feature typically 20 to 30 mm 0 8 to 1 2 in 7 Weight increases from around 120 g 4 oz at weaning to gt 1100 g 40 oz in adulthood The maximum recorded weight is 2000 g 70 oz though few wild specimens exceed 1600 g 55 oz even in autumn 5 Adult summer weight is typically somewhat less than in autumn with an average of around 800 g 28 oz and adult weights commonly as low as 500 g 18 oz 8 Males tend to be slightly larger than females but sex differences in body weight are overshadowed by enormous seasonal variation 7 The European hedgehog is unlike any other creature across most of its range Where it co exists with the northern white breasted hedgehog Erinaceus roumanicus the two species are difficult to distinguish in the field the latter having a white spot on its chest 2 It is probably the largest hedgehog species and is possibly the heaviest member of the order Erinaceomorpha 9 Colour variation edit nbsp Blonde hedgehogLeucistic or blonde hedgehogs occasionally occur Such specimens are believed to have a pair of rare recessive genes giving rise to their black eyes and creamy coloured spines however they are not strictly speaking albino They are extremely rare except on North Ronaldsay and the Channel Island of Alderney where around 25 of the population is thought to be blonde 10 True albino morphs of the hedgehog occur infrequently 6 Behaviour and ecology edit source source source source source source source source European hedgehog anointing itselfThe European hedgehog is largely nocturnal It has a hesitant gait frequently stopping to smell the air Unlike the smaller warmer climate species the European hedgehog may hibernate in the winter However most wake at least once to move their nests 11 Diet edit nbsp A European hedgehog eating fish carcass photographed in Altai Krai nbsp A European hedgehog eating fallen fruits source source source source source source source source European hedgehog foraging in hedgerowThe European hedgehog is an insectivore Its diet consists largely of earthworms as well as snails and slugs beetles ants bees and wasps earwigs cockroaches crickets and grasshoppers butterflies and moths and caterpillars and other insect larvae 12 Eggs of ground nesting birds are also taken and carcasses may be foraged on Hedgehogs may also eat lizards snakes frogs and small rodents 12 Plant matter appears to make up only a negligible part of the hedgehog s diet 13 14 15 Breeding edit nbsp A one day old newborn European hedgehog nbsp A female with one youngThe breeding season commences after hibernation Pregnancies peak between May and July though they have been recorded as late as September Gestation is 31 to 35 days The female alone raises the litter which typically numbers between four and six though can range from two to ten Studies have indicated that litter size may increase in more northern climes The young are born blind with a covering of small spines By the time they are 36 hours old the second outer coat of spines begins to sprout By 11 days they can roll into a ball Weaning occurs at around six weeks of age 16 Longevity and mortality edit European hedgehogs may live to more than ten years of age although the average life expectancy is three years Starvation is the most common cause of death usually occurring during hibernation If alarmed the animal will roll into a ball to protect itself Many potential predators are repelled by its spines but predation does occur Remains of hedgehogs have been found in the stomachs of red foxes Vulpes vulpes European badgers Meles meles and pine martens Martes martes A large portion of these may be from hedgehog carcasses especially roadkill However hedgehogs tend to be absent from areas where badgers are numerous nbsp A pellet made by owl with hair and spikes of hedgehogEurasian eagle owls Bubo bubo and golden eagles Aquila chrysaetos are the only regular avian predators of this species and may even prefer them as prey The owl after grabbing the hedgehog by its face tends to skin the mammal s prickly back with its talons before consumption resulting in several hedgehog backs being found around eagle owl roosts and nests 17 In Spain reduction of European rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus numbers due to rabbit haemorrhagic disease has made the European hedgehog one of the top preferred prey species for eagle owls 18 Elsewhere eagle owls often prefer these hedgehogs to any other prey species as the hedgehog can comprise up to 23 by number and 30 7 by biomass of eagle owl prey remains 19 20 21 On the Swedish island of Gotland the golden eagle may take larger numbers of hedgehogs than any other prey due to an otherwise low diversity of native land mammals although the introduction of European rabbits has shifted the eagle s prey preferences there 22 Distribution and habitat editThe European hedgehog is native to Europe including European Russia with a global distribution extending from the British Isles and the Iberian Peninsula eastwards through much of western to central Europe and from southern Fennoscandia and the northern Baltic to north west Russia It is present also on Mediterranean islands Corsica Sardinia Elba Sicily on most of the French Atlantic islands as well as on British Islands autochthonous and introduced 23 It is an invasive exotic species in New Zealand and has probably been introduced to Ireland and many of the smaller islands where it occurs 24 Colonists took hedgehogs from England and Scotland to New Zealand on sailing ships from the 1860s to the 1890s mainly as a biological control against agricultural pests or as a pet 25 Few survived the ca 50 100 days voyage 25 but those that did had lost all their fleas Animals found their first homes in the South Island where their spread was helped by guards dropping them off at country railway stations Hedgehogs were introduced to the North Island in the 1890s but some were also transported from South Island between 1906 and 1911 25 and from then on their numbers increased at an exponential rate By the 1920s they had become so numerous that game bird hunters blamed them for reduced bag sizes Hedgehogs were declared noxious animals and a bounty of one shilling a snout paid by regional authorities for several years By the 1950s hedgehogs could be found over the whole country with the exception of the coldest wettest corner of the South Island and alpine areas of permanent snow Nevertheless hedgehogs have been seen climbing New Zealand glaciers Hedgehogs do not reach the same weight in New Zealand as in colder parts of Europe With its milder winters New Zealand hedgehogs hibernate for only three months of the year so do not need to put on so much weight in autumn as their ancestors In northern New Zealand many hedgehogs do not hibernate at all One of New Zealand s pioneer hedgehogs probably had faulty teeth for this feature is found in about 50 of today s animals Most New Zealanders welcome hedgehogs in their gardens as they relish slugs and snails Conservationists are less happy as hedgehogs compete for invertebrate food with native bush birds and prey on some rare insects lizards and ground nesting birds As a result extensive hedgehog control programs are under way in some parts of the country killing thousands of them To judge by roadkill counts North Island hedgehogs were at their highest numbers in the 1950s Since then roadkill counts have fallen dramatically from about 50 100 km to less than 1 100 km 26 nbsp Hedgehog in autumn in its nest under a bush in Brastad SwedenThe European hedgehog is found across a wide range of habitat types encompassing both semi natural vegetation types and those areas that have been heavily modified by man The range includes woodland grasslands such as meadows and pasture arable land orchards and vineyards as well as within the matrix of habitat types found in human settlements It prefers lowlands and hills up to 400 600m but is also locally present on mountains exceptionally up to an altitude of 1500 2000m e g Alps and Pyrenees 27 Outside cultivated land it prefers marginal zones of forests particularly ecotonal grass and scrub vegetation 27 Hedgehogs are most abundant within the gardens parks and amenity land close to or within human settlements 28 They are generally scarce in areas of coniferous woodland marshes and moorland probably because of a lack of suitable sites and materials for the construction of winter nests or hibernacula which have specific requirements 6 Conservation editGenerally the hedgehog is widely distributed and can be found in good numbers where people are tolerant of their residence in gardens To date the IUCN classifies the species as Least Concern and currently the population as Stable In some areas they are common victims of road kills and may be hunted by dogs such as in Sardinia 2 On 28 August 2007 the new Biodiversity Action Plan included the European hedgehog on the list of species and habitats in Britain that need conservation and greater protection 29 30 In Denmark and Poland the European hedgehog is protected by law It is illegal to capture or hurt them but rehabilitation of unhealthy hedgehogs is accepted 31 32 It is protected in all European countries which have signed the Berne Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats A low coverage assembly of the genome of Erinaceus europaeus was released by the Broad Institute in June 2006 as part of the Mammalian Genome Project 33 Status in Great Britain editPopulation size edit An estimate of 36 5 million by Burton 34 was based on extrapolating up from a density of 2 5 animals ha one per acre but this was based on limited data and is probably an overestimate A more recent estimate of 1 550 000 in Great Britain 35 England 1 100 000 Scotland 310 000 Wales 140 000 is more reliable but still has a high degree of uncertainty as it is based on very limited information about hedgehog density estimates for different habitat types 3 Given this figure and more firmly established rates of decline 36 it is now thought likely that there are fewer than a million hedgehogs in Great Britain 37 In the UK badgers are the main predator of hedgehogs 38 39 and also compete for some of the same foods Badger numbers have increased substantially in recent years due to increased legal protection and increased predation by badgers may well be a major cause of declining hedgehog numbers in England Population status edit In 2007 the hedgehog was classified a Biodiversity Action Plan priority species in Britain largely in response to negative trends identified in national surveys such as Mammals on Roads survey 40 run by People s Trust for Endangered Species PTES that found an annual decline in counts of road casualties of around 7 from 2001 to 2004 41 42 Historic data from the National Gamebag Census suggest a steady decline between 1960 and 1980 43 Evidence from a questionnaire in 2005 and 2006 also supported an ongoing decline with almost half of 20 000 participants in PTES Hogwatchsurvey 44 reporting the impression that there were fewer hedgehogs than there were five years earlier 45 A review of the available survey data for the population trend of the hedgehog in Britain was undertaken by the British Trust for Ornithology BTO in a report commissioned by PTES and the British Hedgehog Preservation Society BHPS 36 This concluded that at a conservative estimate 25 of the British hedgehog population had been lost in a decade 46 The report also highlighted the importance of long term monitoring to provide datasets with sufficient power to allow the changes to the population to be identified Currently the most important monitoring programmes involved in collecting information about the status of the British hedgehog population are PTES Mammals on Roads and Living with Mammals surveys and the BTO Breeding Bird Survey and Garden BirdWatch survey 47 A recent review of these surveys now suggests that rural populations have declined by at least a half and urban populations by up to a third since 2000 48 Pest status editThis species has become a serious pest in areas where it has been introduced outside of its native range One such location is the Western Isles of Scotland where introduced hedgehogs eat the eggs of ground nesting waders such as common snipe dunlin common redshank and northern lapwing It is also considered a pest in New Zealand where it preys upon various native fauna 49 including insects snails lizards and ground nesting birds particularly shore birds 50 As with many introduced animals it lacks natural predators Attempts to eliminate hedgehogs from bird colonies on the Scottish islands of North Uist and Benbecula in the Outer Hebrides were met with international outrage Eradication began in 2003 with 690 hedgehogs being killed Animal welfare groups attempted rescues to save the hedgehogs By 2007 legal injunctions against the killing of hedgehogs were put in place In 2008 the elimination process was changed from killing the hedgehogs to trapping them and releasing them on the mainland 51 In popular culture editFrom the early 1950s until the 1980s the hedgehog was sometimes seen as an unofficial symbol of NATO in numerous countries as it represented a peaceful animal that bristles in defence 52 See also editHedgehog Street Hedgehogs in New ZealandReferences edit Hutterer R 2005 Order Erinaceomorpha In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 214 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b c d Amori G 2016 Erinaceus europaeus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T29650A2791303 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T29650A2791303 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b Harris S amp Yalden D W 2008 Mammals of the British Isles Handbook 4th Edition The Mammal Society Southampton Hedgehogs and water voles face extinction in new Red List for British mammals www nhm ac uk Retrieved 2022 03 12 a b Reeve N 1994 Hedgehogs T amp A D Poyser p 7 a b c Morris P A 2006 The New Hedgehog Book Whittet Books London a b Harris S amp Yalden D W 2008 Mammals of the British Isles Handbook 4th edition Mammal Society Southampton pp 241 249 Dickman C R 1988 Age related dietary change in European hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus Journal of Zoology 215 1 14 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1988 tb04881 x Wood G 1983 The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats ISBN 978 0 85112 235 9 Morris P A amp Tutt A 1996 Leucistic hedgehogs on the island of Alderney Journal of Zoology 239 2 387 389 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1996 tb05458 x Haigh A O Riordan R M Butler F 2012 Nesting behaviour and seasonal body mass changes in a rural Irish population of the Western hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus Acta Theriologica 57 4 321 331 doi 10 1007 s13364 012 0080 2 S2CID 18568953 a b Roberts Colin 2011 Erinaceus europaeus European hedgehog Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Retrieved 14 October 2022 Gimmel A Eulenberger U Liesegang A 2021 Feeding the European hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus L risks of commercial diets for wildlife Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition 105 91 96 doi 10 1111 jpn 13561 PMID 34247429 S2CID 235797644 Hubert P Julliard R Biagianti S Poulle M L 2011 Ecological factors driving the higher hedgehog Erinaceus europeaus density in an urban area compared to the adjacent rural area Landscape and Urban Planning 103 1 34 43 doi 10 1016 j landurbplan 2011 05 010 Jones C Moss K Sanders M 2005 Diet of hedgehogs Erinaceus europaeus in the upper Waitaki Basin New Zealand implications for conservation New Zealand Journal of Ecology 29 1 29 35 JSTOR 24056190 The Encyclopedia of Mammals Oxford University Press 2010 p 431 ISBN 9780199567997 by Konig Weick amp Becking 2009 Owls of the World Yale University Press ISBN 0300142277 Antonio Martinez J amp Zuberogoitia I 2001 The response of the Eagle Owl Bubo bubo to an outbreak of the rabbit haemorrhagic disease Journal fur Ornithologie 142 2 204 211 Laursen J T 1999 Fodevalg hos Stor Hornugle Bubo bubo i Danmark Dansk Orn Foren Tidsskr 93 141 144 Leditznig C Leditznig W amp Gossow H 2001 15 Jahre Untersuchungen am Uhu Bubo bubo im Mostviertel Niederosterreichs Stand und Entwicklungstendenzen Egretta 44 45 73 Geidel C 2012 Entwicklung neuartiger Schutzkonzepte fur den Uhu Bubo bubo Abschlussbericht 2012 Gutachten DBU Projekt Tjernberg M 1981 Diet of the golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos during the breeding season in Sweden Ecography 4 1 12 19 Mitchell Jones A J Amori G Bogdanowicz W Krystufek B Reijnders P J H Spitzenberger F Stubbe M Thissen J B M Vohralik V Zima J 1999 The atlas of European mammals Poyser London Harris S amp Yalden D W 2008 Mammals of the British Isles Handbook 4th edition Mammal Society Southampton pp 38 39 a b c Pipek P Pysek P Bacher S Cerna B B Hulme P E 2020 Independent introductions of hedgehogs to the North and South Island of New Zealand New Zealand Journal of Ecology 44 1 3396 doi 10 20417 nzjecol 44 7 King C M Carolyn M Barrett P 2005 The handbook of New Zealand mammals Second ed South Melbourne Vic Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 558477 5 OCLC 64401930 a b Mitchell Jones A J Amori G Bogdanowicz W Krystufek B Reijnders P J H Spitzenberger F Stubbe M Thissen J B M Vohralik V Zima J 1999 The atlas of European mammals Poyser London pp 38 39 Young R P Davison J Trewby I D Wilson G J Delahay R J amp Doncaster C P 2006 Abundance of hedgehogs Erinaceus europaeus in relation to the density and distribution of badgers Meles meles Journal of Zoology 269 3 349 356 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 2006 00078 x Hedgehogs join protection list BBC News 2007 Retrieved 20 October 2014 UK List of Priority Species Biodiversity Action Plan ukbap org uk Pindsvin Archived 2012 03 30 at the Wayback Machine The Forest and Nature Department of DenMark Dz U 2004 nr 220 poz 2237 Internetowy System Aktow Prawnych Isap sejm gov pl in Polish Retrieved on 2012 12 29 Hedgehog Ensembl Genome Browser Retrieved 11 June 2007 Burton M 1969 The Hedgehog A Survival Book on Hedgehogs London Andre Deutsch Harris S Morris P Wray S and Yalden D 1995 A review of British mammals population estimates and conservation status of British mammals other than cetaceans JNCC Peterborough a b Roos S Johnston A and Noble D 2012 UK hedgehog datasets and their potential for long term monitoring BTO Research Report No 598 Vaughan Adam 29 January 2013 Hedgehog population in dramatic decline Guardian Online Retrieved 4 September 2013 Briefing Sheet Badgers and hedgehogs 14 December 2021 Are Badgers to Blame for Declining Hedgehogs Conservation Articles amp Blogs CJ Mammals on Roads survey PTES more information Bright P George L and Balmforth Z 2005 Mammals on Roads development and testing the use of road counts to monitor abundance draft v 9 A report to PTES JNCC JNCC priority species pages Erinaceus europaeus Tapper S 1992 An Ecological Review from Shooting and Gamekeeping Records Game Heritage Game Conservancy Ltd Hogwatch permanent dead link Survey Report PTES and BHPS Archived 2012 06 17 at the Wayback Machine Hof A R 2009 A study of the current status of the hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus and its decline in Great Britain since 1960 PhD Royal Holloway University of London Egham Surrey TW20 0EX UK Wembridge David The State of Britain s Hedgehogs 2011 PDF People s Trust for Endangered Species Retrieved 20 October 2014 Battersby J 2005 UK Mammals Species Status and Population Trends A report by the Tracking Mammals Partnership No 1 JNCC Tracking Mammals Partnership Peterborough Wembridge David The State of Britain s Hedgehogs 2015 PDF People s Trust for Endangered Species Retrieved 6 January 2017 King Carolyn 1985 Immigrant Killers Introduced Predators and the Conservation of Birds in New Zealand Auckland Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 558115 7 Hedgehogs pose prickly problem for native fauna Landcare Research media release 17 September 2003 Archived from the original on 2003 10 01 Retrieved 6 December 2011 Ross David 14 January 2009 18 Trappers Sought for Hebrides to Protect Birds from Hedgehogs The Herald Retrieved 12 June 2009 THE HEDGEHOG NATO S LOST SYMBOL North Atlantic Treaty Organisation published 20 10 2016 retrieved 16 02 2021 Further reading editMacdonald David W amp Priscilla Barrett Mammals of Europe Princeton University Press 1993 ISBN 0 691 09160 9 Warwick Hugh 2010 A Prickly Affair The charm of the hedgehog Penguin ISBN 978 0141034294External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Erinaceus europaeus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Erinaceus europaeus Hedgehog Street UK conservation campaign ARKive Photographs and Videos WildlifeOnline Natural History of the European Hedgehog Hedgehog in the night photographs View the hedgehog genome on Ensembl View the eriEur2 genome assembly in the UCSC Genome Browser Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European hedgehog amp oldid 1186173374, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.