Conservation organization Pro Natura has named the hedgehog the Animal of the Year for 2026, aiming to raise awareness about the gradual disappearance of its natural habitats in Switzerland due to intensive agriculture and tidy urban landscapes.

"One of Switzerland's best-loved wild animals, 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."
For a staggering 20,000 years, the hedgehog has roamed the lands of Switzerland, surviving ice ages and empires. Yet, in 2026, this resilient survivor faces an unprecedented existential threat. Pro Natura has officially crowned the hedgehog as the Swiss Animal of the Year 2026, a title that serves less as a celebration and more as a desperate alarm bell. This is not merely about a beloved garden visitor; it is a stark indictment of how we manage our land.
The conservation organizationâs announcement underscores a critical reality: one of Switzerland's most iconic wild animals is being systematically evicted from its home. Since 2022, the hedgehog has been classified as "potentially threatened" within Swiss bordersâa status echoed by the European Union in 2024. The designation signals that the gradual disappearance of suitable habitats has reached a tipping point. We are witnessing the slow-motion erasure of a species that has outlived mammoths, yet now struggles to survive the modern Swiss landscape.
The Swiss countryside, once a patchwork of biodiversity, has transformed into a hostile monoculture. Pro Natura reports that the agricultural landscape, which sustained hedgehog populations for millennia, has been stripped bare. The chaotic, life-sustaining clutter of natureâhedges, leaf piles, and fallen branchesâhas been ruthlessly cleared away in the name of efficiency. Streams have been forced underground, and production has intensified to industrial levels, leaving the hedgehog with nowhere to hide.
This agricultural sterilization has forced a dramatic migration. Hedgehogs are effectively refugees in their own land, fleeing the barren fields for the perceived safety of human settlements. However, this exodus is fraught with peril. The loss of agricultural habitat is not just a change in scenery; it is a fundamental disruption of the ecological infrastructure that allowed these animals to thrive on insects and worms found in plants of average height. The countryside is no longer a home; it is a food desert.
Driven from the fields, hedgehogs have sought asylum in the gardens and parks of Swiss villages and towns. But this new habitat is a trap disguised as a sanctuary. While these areas offer proximity, they present a gauntlet of lethal modern hazards. The manicured perfection of the Swiss lawn is often maintained by robotic mowers, which can inflict horrific, often fatal injuries on the nocturnal wanderers.
Furthermore, the density of human infrastructure creates a minefield of risks. Cars patrol the asphalt borders of these green islands, turning a simple crossing into a life-or-death gamble. Pro Natura warns that the proximity to humans is a double-edged sword; while some gardens offer refuge, the obsession with "tidy" landscapesâdevoid of undergrowth or shelterâleaves hedgehogs exposed and vulnerable. The urban environment is not a replacement for lost wildlands; it is a high-stakes obstacle course where one wrong turn leads to tragedy.
Hunger is the silent killer stalking the Swiss hedgehog. While these creatures are opportunistic eaters, willing to sample various scraps, their survival hinges on a diet of animal originâspecifically insects. Pro Natura highlights a disturbing trend: the collapse of insect populations is directly starving the hedgehog.
The crisis is twofold. First, the hedgehog must gorge itself to survive the winter hibernation. Second, when they awake, they confront a spring and summer where insect life is increasingly scarce. The "tidy" gardening aesthetic and pesticide use have decimated the invertebrate populations that serve as the hedgehog's primary fuel source. Without a sufficient density of beetles, caterpillars, and worms, both young hoglets and adults face malnutrition. We are creating a landscape that looks green but is biologically empty, leaving our wildlife to starve in the middle of lush-looking gardens.
The situation is critical, but it is not irreversible. In a bold move to counter this decline, Pro Natura is launching the "Bonjour nature" project in March 2026. This initiative is a direct call to action for every Swiss resident: it is time to embrace the chaos of nature. The project aims to support and educate individuals on how to cultivate natural, messy, and life-sustaining gardens.
Reversing the "potentially threatened" status requires a cultural shift. We must trade our obsession with manicured lawns for the ecological richness of wild corners, log piles, and native planting. By restoring connectivity between gardens and eliminating the use of chemicals, we can rebuild the ecological infrastructure the hedgehog desperately needs. The hedgehog has survived here for 20,000 years; it is our responsibility to ensure it survives the next twenty. The fight for the hedgehog is, ultimately, a fight for the soul of the Swiss landscape.