In an effort to raise awareness about declining populations, the conservation organization Pro Natura has named the hedgehog as the Swiss Animal of the Year for 2026. The group warns that the beloved mammal is rapidly losing suitable habitats in both agricultural and urban areas.

"The hedgehog faces a gradual disappearance of suitable habitats."
"Hedges, leaf piles and branches have become rarer, streams have been channelled underground and agricultural production has become more intensive."
The hedgehog is no longer just a charming visitor to our twilight gardens; it is a species in crisis. Pro Natura has officially crowned the hedgehog as the Swiss Animal of the Year for 2026, a title that serves less as a celebration and more as a desperate warning. This beloved mammal, deeply woven into the fabric of Swiss folklore and nature, is confronting an existential threat as its world shrinks before our eyes.
The designation comes at a critical juncture. Since 2022, the hedgehog has been classified as "potentially threatened" within Switzerland, a status echoed by the European Union in 2024. The message from the country's leading conservation organization is unambiguous: the gradual disappearance of suitable habitats is pushing this resilient creature to the brink. This is not merely about saving a single species; it is a stark indictment of how we manage our land. By spotlighting the hedgehog, Pro Natura is forcing a national conversation on the rapid erosion of biodiversity that threatens the ecological balance of the entire region.
For a staggering 20,000 years, the hedgehog has roamed the lands of what is now Switzerland. Its survival through millennia was guaranteed by a landscape that perfectly catered to its needs: diverse farmland, moderate vegetation, and an abundance of insects. However, the last century has dismantled this ancient sanctuary. Pro Natura reports that the agricultural revolution has been catastrophic for these small mammals.
The transformation of the Swiss countryside is undeniable and brutal. Hedges have been ripped out, streams channeled underground, and messy leaf pilesâessential for shelterâhave vanished. Intensive agricultural production has sterilized the landscape, stripping away the chaotic, natural elements that hedgehogs rely on for safety and nesting. Where there was once a thriving ecosystem of scrub and cover, there are now monocultures hostile to wildlife. The hedgehog's historical stronghold in the countryside has been decimated, forcing a migration that changes the very nature of the species' existence in Switzerland.
Driven from the fields, the hedgehog has sought asylum in the concrete jungles of our villages and towns. This migration to urban parks and private gardens is a desperate adaptation, not a choice. While these areas offer an alternative habitat, they present a lethal obstacle course that claims thousands of lives annually. The proximity to humans is proving to be a double-edged sword.
The dangers are immediate and mechanical. Automobiles, robotic lawnmowers, and manicured landscaping have become the new predators. Pro Natura warns that this shift to urban living is fraught with peril, as the very tools we use to maintain our "green" spaces are often fatal to the wildlife trying to inhabit them. The hedgehog is caught in a deadly squeeze: exiled from the farm by efficiency, and hunted in the garden by machinery. This forced urbanization highlights a critical failure in our ecological infrastructureâthere is simply nowhere left for them to go safely.
Survival is not just about shelter; it is about sustenance, and here the hedgehog faces a silent famine. While they are opportunistic eaters, hedgehogs are biologically dependent on food of animal originâspecifically insects and wormsâto survive and build the fat reserves necessary for hibernation. Pro Natura emphasizes that the collapse of insect populations is a direct threat to the hedgehog's viability.
The scarcity of insects is becoming an annual crisis. In a healthy ecosystem, insects are abundant, but modern pesticide use and habitat sterilization have caused these populations to plummet. This shortage is particularly devastating in the months leading up to winter, when a hedgehog must gorge itself to survive the cold. Without sufficient protein-rich prey, many animals, particularly the young, face starvation before they can even attempt to hibernate. The hedgehog is starving in a landscape that looks green but is ecologically empty.
The designation of the hedgehog as Animal of the Year 2026 is a call to arms for every Swiss resident with a patch of grass. Pro Natura is moving beyond awareness to direct action with the launch of the "Bonjour nature" project in March 2026. This initiative aims to empower citizens to transform their sterile lawns into biodiversity hotspots.
The solution lies in a return to disorder. The project encourages the creation of natural gardensâspaces where leaves are left to lie, wood is piled high, and insects are welcomed back. It is a challenge to the Swiss cultural norm of pristine tidiness, demanding a shift in perspective where a messy garden is seen as a healthy one. By restoring these micro-habitats, there is hope that we can pull the hedgehog back from the brink. The fate of this spiky icon now rests in our backyards.