Most of countryside now devoid of hedgehogs, study finds
by Damian Carrington Environment editor from on (#3Y7JP)
Something 'fundamentally wrong' in rural landscape, scientists say, with numbers thought to have fallen 80% since 1950s
A "perfect storm" of intensive farming and rising badger populations has left most of the countryside in England and Wales devoid of hedgehogs, according to the first systematic national survey.
The research used footprints left by hedgehogs in special tunnels to reveal that they were living at just 20% of the 261 sites surveyed. Hedgehogs, which topped a vote in 2013 to nominate a national species for Britain, were significantly less common where badgers were more numerous. Badgers eat hedgehogs and also compete for the beetles and worms the prickly animals consume.
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