Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Trail cameras, AI and wildlife spotters recruited to count hedgehogs

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A PROJECT using trail cameras, AI and armchair wildlife-spotters aims to come up with the first robust estimates for the country’s hedgehog population.

The “national hedgehog monitoring programme” is a three-year pilot scheme that is attempting to gather more robust informatio­n on the prickly mammals than previous population estimates to aid their conservati­on.

Hedgehogs have suffered historic declines, and the latest study into their numbers published in 2022 showed declines of between 30 and 75% across different areas of the countrysid­e since 2000, although urban areas had stable population­s showing signs of recovery.

For the new pilot scheme, trail cameras are being used to capture images of hedgehogs and other wildlife in habitats including urban parks, gardens, woodlands and farmlands.

In what the scheme’s organisers describe as a world-first for hedgehog conservati­on, artificial intelligen­ce algorithms are also being used to sort all the images captured to minimise the numbers of blank or human images and maximise the number of animal shots.

These can then be given to homebased volunteers known as “spotters” to identify the species they can see in the images.

Once the images are classified, a team of analysts can produce population numbers and informatio­n on the hedgehogs, wildlife charities behind the scheme said. Last year, trail cameras were placed at 13 different sites across the country from Dorset to Glasgow, with 30 cameras at each location left in place for a month, generating thousands of images.

Now volunteers from across the UK are being urged to help make the project a success – from the comfort of their own homes – by signing up to look through images that have been sorted by AI and identify the species they see.

The programme is being led by the British Hedgehog Preservati­on Society (BHPS) and the People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES) in partnershi­p with Nottingham Trent University, ZSL’s London HogWatch, Durham University and MammalWeb,

and largely funded by Natural England.

Dr Henrietta Pringle, national hedgehog monitoring programme coordinato­r at PTES, said: “Previous studies have estimated hedgehog population­s, but there has never been a rigorous nationwide survey of them – until now. We know hedgehogs are struggling, especially in the countrysid­e, but before we can put practical conservati­on measures in place we need to understand where they are and why they’re declining.

“This is the first study where population­s are measured year after year, in the same location, which will produce vital data and allow us to identify those at risk, which in time will hopefully help us to reverse the decline. The results will also allow us to see regional and habitat difference­s, and identify what factors impact them in different places, which will not only be fascinatin­g but also incredibly useful for their long-term conservati­on.”

The team behind the project have already started checking images from 2023 with the help of a pilot group of volunteers.

Hedgehogs have been spotted at six of them so far, while species including tawny owls, stoats and red squirrels have also been seen.

Over the three years of the pilot, the team will place cameras in more sites with the hope of surveying 40 sites across Britain by the end of the trial.

■ To sign up and become a ‘spotter’, people can visit www.nhmp.co.uk.

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