Abstract

Although residential areas are often unfavourable for wildlife, some species can take advantage of the available shelter and anthropogenic sources of food such as supplementary feeding. The European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) is increasingly associated with gardens and villages and less so with arable farmland. Suggested drivers for this include the following: hedgehogs’ attraction to higher food densities, including natural prey and anthropogenic sources, a greater range of day nest sites and warmer microclimates in rural villages, coupled with decreased risk of predation by badgers (Meles meles). We investigated the contribution of these drivers by radio-tracking hedgehogs on four arable sites, two with badgers present. Seventy-eight hedgehogs were tracked, 32 yielding enough data to calculate home range sizes. At the home range and landscape scales, gardens and buildings were the highest ranked habitats compared with their availability. Woodland and arable land were the lowest ranked compared with their availability. Villages were the most selected habitat for nesting. When hedgehogs were found closer to buildings, their ranges were smaller and we speculate this is due to increased food availability in villages. Where badgers were present hedgehogs remained closer to cover and their home ranges were on average 12.2 ha smaller. On badger-occupied sites, 50% fewer radio-tracking fixes were on arable land. We conclude that resource availability coupled with nest site selection and badger presence drives hedgehogs’ selection of rural villages. We found no effect of ambient temperature on habitat use. We recommend focusing conservation efforts on maintaining hedgehog populations in rural villages.

Highlights

  • Built-up areas cover over 16,750 km2 of the UK and over 50% of the land in the UK is developed or used for agriculture (The UK National Ecosystem Assessment 2011)

  • We wished to capture 20 hedgehogs at each site, but twice as many hedgehogs were found on sites without badgers, than on sites with badgers

  • We confirmed that hedgehogs selected rural villages over the surrounding predominantly arable farmland

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Summary

Introduction

Built-up areas cover over 16,750 km of the UK and over 50% of the land in the UK is developed or used for agriculture (The UK National Ecosystem Assessment 2011). Eur J Wildl Res (2017) 63: 54 higher occurrence of some natural prey species in urban areas allowing predator numbers to increase (e.g. Cooke et al 2006). These advantageous qualities have allowed some species to thrive in residential areas, omnivorous species, which can take advantage of human food waste (Fedriani et al 2001; McKinney 2002; Chace and Walsh 2006)

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