After being hunted to local extinction, the otter is being spotted again in Swiss rivers and lakes. Conservation groups celebrate the comeback but warn that its long-term survival depends on continued efforts to renaturalize waterways.

"The otter has returned to Switzerland. But whether this success lasts depends on whether the renaturalisation of the waters is pursued."
Switzerland is witnessing a biological miracle that few thought possible just a decade ago. After being hunted, poisoned, and engineered out of existence, the European fish otter has reclaimed its place in the Swiss landscape. This is not a mere fluke; it is a dramatic reversal of a century-long decline. The last native otter was spotted in 1989 on Lake Neuchâtel, marking what many believed was the final chapter for the species in the Alpine nation. However, nature is fighting back. Driven by successful conservation efforts in neighboring countries, these resilient predators are crossing borders, swimming through the Danube catchment and into the heart of Switzerland. The return of this apex predator is a powerful indicator of ecosystem potential, yet it serves as a stark reminder of what we nearly lost forever. The silence of the riverbanks has been broken, but the victory remains fragile.
The data is undeniable: the otter is surging across the Swiss plateau. In January 2026, a historic discovery in Canton Solothurn shattered a 91-year drought of sightings. Traces found in the snow along the River Aare in Selzach confirmed the predator's presence for the first time since the early 20th century. Just days later, high-definition wildlife cameras in Canton Glarus captured an otter navigating the Linthkanal with precision. This is a nationwide phenomenon. From the rugged terrain of GraubĂźnden to the urban waterways of Zurich and Lucerne, and extending into Ticino and Bern, the species is establishing a foothold. Most encouraging is the sighting of juveniles, proving that these animals are not just passing throughâthey are breeding. This geographic expansion represents a significant shift in Swiss biodiversity, signaling that our rivers are once again becoming viable corridors for high-level wildlife.
A staggering crisis lurks beneath the surface of Switzerland's picturesque waters, threatening to starve the very animals we are celebrating. While the otter has returned, its primary food source is in freefall. A sobering 2 out of 3 fish species in Switzerland are currently threatened with extinction. This ecological imbalance creates a lethal paradox: we have invited the guest of honor back to the table, but the table is nearly empty. The semi-aquatic lifestyle of the otter demands high caloric intake from healthy fish stocks to survive the harsh Alpine winters. Environmental organizations like Pro Natura warn that without immediate intervention to restore aquatic biodiversity, the otterâs return will be a short-lived cameo rather than a permanent residency. The pressure on our rivers is severe, driven by agricultural runoff, chemical pollutants, and the lingering effects of industrialization that decimated these habitats decades ago.
Switzerland is failing its own legal mandates for environmental protection. Despite federal laws requiring the renaturation of 50 kilometers of watercourses every year, the nation is currently realizing less than half of that target. This 'renaturation gap' is the single greatest hurdle to the otter's long-term survival. Concrete embankments and artificial barriers continue to choke Swiss rivers, preventing the natural flow and habitat diversity that otters and fish require. Pro Natura and Pro Lutra have issued a blistering critique of this slow progress, asserting that the current pace of restoration is insufficient to sustain a growing otter population. While the animals have shown they can find their way back, they cannot dismantle the dams and concrete walls that fragment their world. The survival of the species is now a political question: will Switzerland honor its environmental commitments, or will it allow bureaucracy to stall the restoration of its natural heritage?
The return of the otter is a triumph of nature's resilience, but it must not lead to complacency. As World Otter Day approaches on May 27, the focus shifts from the excitement of sightings to the hard work of habitat management. Events at the Muzoo zoo in La Chaux-de-Fonds and nationwide webinars aim to educate a public that has lived without this creature for generations. The future of the Swiss otter depends on a holistic approach: cleaner water, more natural riverbanks, and a dramatic recovery of fish populations. We are at a critical crossroads. If Switzerland accelerates its renaturation efforts and addresses the systemic threats to its waterways, the otter will become a permanent fixture of our wilderness once again. If we fail, these recent sightings will be remembered only as a fleeting ghost of what might have been. The otter is back; now we must give it a reason to stay.