Hedgehog numbers have more than halved in some areas since 2000.
Oliver Leader de Saxe reports.
Oliver Leader de Saxe reports.
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00:00A hedgehog on the move, a species on the decline.
00:06Across rural parts of the UK, hedgehogs have seen their numbers cut down over the last
00:1320 years, falling by up to 75% since 2000.
00:19That means in places like Kent, where the majority of the county is undeveloped countryside
00:25or farmland, hedgehogs are most at risk.
00:28We've had several rescues, larger rescues, five across the county closed in the last
00:32year or two.
00:34The demand for rescue spaces is also increasing as well, so those of us that are left are
00:40seeing much higher demand.
00:41Not only is the species declining at a massive rate, there's estimations that hedgehogs could
00:47be extinct by as soon as 2050.
00:51The hazards that they're facing because of population growth means that the ones that
00:55are still left are facing more threats than ever before and needing help to be able to
01:02survive.
01:03With Thorn Hedgehog Rescue nurturing up to 150 hogs back to health at any one time, the
01:08pressure is on.
01:10But the future isn't all bleak.
01:13Hedgehog numbers have evened out in urban areas.
01:16And this week, conservation charities launched the first ever National Hedgehog Conservation
01:22Strategy aiming to tackle the root causes of hedgehog decline.
01:27With access to food reducing the number of hedgehogs being hit by vehicles and habitat
01:33loss all being priorities for the next decade.
01:38And the co-author of the report says you can also help at home.
01:42First and foremost, we've got this idea of hedgehog highways, which are the 13 centimetre
01:46gaps in fences.
01:47I think a lot of people have heard of those now, which is brilliant.
01:51So it's a case of cutting a gap in the fence or digging a channel underneath that lets
01:55hedgehogs in, you know, encouraging friends and neighbours to do the same thing to create
01:58a hedgehog street.
02:00And then once you've done that, you can start to think about lovely wildlife friendly features
02:03in the garden.
02:04So things like log piles, leaf piles, compost heaps, all of those things are going to increase
02:09that creepy crawly, that invertebrate prey.
02:12And that's going to, you know, that's going to bring hedgehogs in.
02:14A prickly conversation then, but one that could keep Kent's hedgehogs safe for years
02:19to come.
02:20Oliver, Leader of the Sats, reporting for KMTV.