Posted: Mon 9th May 2022

Wrexham Glyndwr University awarded Hedgehog Friendly silver status

Wrexham.com for people living in or visiting the Wrexham area
This article is old - Published: Monday, May 9th, 2022

Wrexham Glyndwr University is celebrating after being awarded a Silver Hedgehog Friendly Campus award.

It marks further progress after the university achieved the Bronze certificate last year, continuing its journey to raise awareness about hedgehogs through a number of student-led on-campus hedgehog surveys, and looking after wild areas of campus.

Litter picks are also held, hedgehog highways have been created on campus and there are visits too from Henry the hedgehog sniffer dog.

The last 20 years have seen a rapid decline in the number of hedgehogs.

A recent State of British Hedgehog Report 2022, produced jointly by the British Hedgehog Preservation Society and People Trust for Endangered Species, finding that while numbers in urban areas are starting to stabilise, rural hedgehog populations have declined by between a third and three quarters.

Jenny Thomas, Glyndwr University Safety, Health & Environment Manager said: “There are plenty of simple things that you can do to help hedgehogs in your local area.

“They include making sure there is easy access to your garden by making a hole in your boundary fence about the size of a CD case, keeping a wild corner in your garden to provide food and shelter to hedgehogs, checking the garden before mowing or strimming – lots of hedgehogs get injured by strimmer’s every year – and reducing your use of pesticides.

“Recently, toxic metaldeyhyde slug pellets have been banned from sale – these can poison hedgehogs – and reducing pesticide use in your garden or finding a non-chemical alternative is a great way to help hedgehogs and if you are lucky enough to encourage hedgehogs into your garden they are good natural pest control as they love to eat slugs and snails.”

In 2022 Glyndwr University will be working on their Gold award and students on the Animal Behaviour Welfare and Conservation Science Degree will be getting involved in learning more about hedgehog ecology and undertaking hedgehog surveys this year.

Hedgehog Friendly Campus is a UK wide project which is open to universities, colleges and primary schools to get involved with completing activities to protect hedgehogs from hazards, enhance their habitat and raise awareness about hedgehog decline.

Jenny added: “If you don’t have a garden you can still help hedgehogs by litter picking to prevent hedgehogs getting injured or trapped in litter or by signing up to Hedgehog Street where you can learn more about hedgehogs and log your sightings on their website.”

If you’d like your school or college to get involved you can email [email protected] or contact energy&[email protected] if you want to learn how Glyndwr University have worked on the project.



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