Climate Change Forces Swiss Marmots to Higher Ground
New study reveals alpine marmots now live 86 meters higher than 40 years ago, though maintaining their 2,700-meter ceiling, indicating significant climate impact on Swiss wildlife.
New study reveals alpine marmots now live 86 meters higher than 40 years ago, though maintaining their 2,700-meter ceiling, indicating significant climate impact on Swiss wildlife.

"Other factors probably play a more important role than the warmer temperatures."
"But we still only have an average of six days per year with more than 25 degrees in the Dischma Valley, which is too few for negative effects."
The Swiss Alps are witnessing a silent but significant migration. A groundbreaking study by the Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF) reveals that alpine marmots have ascended an average of 86 meters over the last four decades. This is not a random drift; it is a measurable response to a changing environment. However, the study conducted in the Dischma Valley near Davos uncovers a critical limitation: the ceiling is fixed. Despite the climb, these iconic rodents refuseāor are unableāto venture beyond 2,700 meters, the exact same upper limit observed in 1982.
This creates a dangerous ecological paradox. While the population's center of gravity shifts upward, their absolute range is not expanding; it is compressing. The marmots are effectively being squeezed against a hard altitude barrier. This data, derived from rigorous analysis comparing current populations to 1982 baselines, confirms that while wildlife attempts to adapt to the warming climate, geographical and biological realities impose strict boundaries that no amount of migration can overcome.
Heat is the invisible enemy for the alpine marmot. The SLF study highlights a physiological breaking point: 25 degrees Celsius. When temperatures surge past this threshold, these animals suffer acute heat stress. Instead of foraging for the vital fat reserves needed to survive the harsh Swiss winter, they are forced to retreat into their deep burrows to cool down. This behavioral shift has potentially fatal implications. Less time eating means thinner fat layers, directly threatening their survival during the long hibernation period.
In the lower parts of the Alps, this thermal threat is already becoming a reality. While the high-altitude Dischma Valley currently averages only six such hot days annuallyāa number SLF biologist Anne Kempel notes is currently "too few for negative effects"āthe trajectory is undeniable. As global temperatures climb, the number of "danger days" will inevitably rise, turning their summer foraging grounds into thermal traps. The marmot is caught in a race against the thermometer, where every degree of warming cuts into their feeding time.
Geography dictates destiny, and for the marmot, the law of the land is absolute. Why not simply climb higher than 2,700 meters to escape the heat? Anne Kempel explains that temperature isn't the only dictator of habitat. "Other factors probably play a more important role," she asserts. Above the 2,700-meter ceiling, the terrain becomes hostile to their very existence. Marmots require deep, stable soil to excavate their complex burrow systemsāa resource that vanishes into bedrock at extreme altitudes.
Furthermore, survival depends on specific environmental architecture. They rely on a thick blanket of snow to insulate their hibernation dens from freezing air, conditions optimally met at their current 2,500-meter stronghold. Crucially, their diet is specialized; they depend on alpine flora rich in linoleic acid to regulate body temperature during hibernation. These plants do not thrive on the barren peaks. Consequently, the marmot cannot simply migrate endlessly upward; they are tethered to the specific soil and vegetation zones that stop abruptly where the rock takes over.
The window for adaptation is closing. The data paints a picture of a shrinking world for one of Switzerland's most beloved animals. We are witnessing a "habitat squeeze" of unprecedented clarity. As the climate warms, the tree line is relentlessly creeping upward, consuming the open meadows that marmots require for visibility and feeding. Simultaneously, their upper limit remains cemented at 2,700 meters due to soil constraints.
The result is a narrowing band of habitable land. While the immediate threat in the Dischma Valley is manageable, the long-term implications for Swiss biodiversity are critical. If the tree line rises and the ceiling stays fixed, the marmot's domain will eventually be compressed to a sliver. This study serves as a canary in the coal mineāor rather, a marmot on the mountain. It signals that even in the vastness of the Swiss Alps, there is nowhere left to go but a narrower, more precarious existence.