Predicting hedgehog mortality risks on British roads using habitat suitability modelling

PeerJ. 2020 Jan 21:7:e8154. doi: 10.7717/peerj.8154. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Road vehicle collisions are likely to be an important contributory factor in the decline of the European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) in Britain. Here, a collaborative roadkill dataset collected from multiple projects across Britain was used to assess when, where and why hedgehog roadkill are more likely to occur. Seasonal trends were assessed using a Generalized Additive Model. There were few casualties in winter-the hibernation season for hedgehogs-with a gradual increase from February that reached a peak in July before declining thereafter. A sequential multi-level Habitat Suitability Modelling (HSM) framework was then used to identify areas showing a high probability of hedgehog roadkill occurrence throughout the entire British road network (∼400,000 km) based on multi-scale environmental determinants. The HSM predicted that grassland and urban habitat coverage were important in predicting the probability of roadkill at a national scale. Probabilities peaked at approximately 50% urban cover at a one km scale and increased linearly with grassland cover (improved and rough grassland). Areas predicted to experience high probabilities of hedgehog roadkill occurrence were therefore in urban and suburban environments, that is, where a mix of urban and grassland habitats occur. These areas covered 9% of the total British road network. In combination with information on the frequency with which particular locations have hedgehog road casualties, the framework can help to identify priority areas for mitigation measures.

Keywords: Erinaceus europaeus; Habitat fragmentation; Hedgehogs; Maxent; Mitigation; Population decline; Road casualties; Roadkill; Wildlife-vehicle collisions.

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.ksn02v70h

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Mammal Society, the People’s Trust for Endangered Species and The British Hedgehog Preservation Society. Fiona Mathews is supported by a NERC KE Fellowship NE/S006486/1 and the University of Sussex. Frazer Coomber is supported by the University of Sussex. The initial study design was developed by the authors and the funders who were interested in using the roadkill presence data available to better understand where they are occurring. The authors were free to write up the results without interference. The decision to publish the manuscript also lay with the authors.