Łopucki Rafał, Kitowski Ignacy, Perlińska-Teresiak Magdalena, Klich Daniel
Centre for Interdisciplinary Research, The John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Konstantynów 1J, 20-708 Lublin, Poland.
State School of Higher Education in Chełm, Pocztowa 54, 22-100 Chełm, Poland.
Animals (Basel). 2021 Mar 18;11(3):868. doi: 10.3390/ani11030868.
Globally, wildlife is affected by unprecedented changes related to the COVID-19 pandemic. In this paper, the lockdown effect on the traffic-related mortality in hedgehogs in an urban area was studied. Comparing the pre-pandemic (2018 and 2019) and pandemic (2020) years, we showed that hedgehog roadkill levels during the lockdown period were over 50% lower (which means a decrease greater than the decrease in road traffic in the same period measured by the number of accidents or the average number of vehicles per day). Based on literature data, we showed that this may mean at least tens of thousands of hedgehogs have survived on a national scale. We report the need to start intensive research on the possible demographic and genetic effects of this unique phenomenon. We also ask how stable the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic will be on wildlife and whether the lockdown (which is an anthropause) may reverse the negative trends in the decline in the number of wild species, including hedgehogs.
在全球范围内,野生动物正受到与新冠疫情相关的前所未有的变化的影响。在本文中,我们研究了封锁对城市地区刺猬与交通相关死亡率的影响。通过比较疫情前(2018年和2019年)和疫情期间(2020年)的数据,我们发现封锁期间刺猬被车辆撞死的数量降低了50%以上(这意味着其减少幅度大于同期交通事故数量或每日平均车辆数所衡量的道路交通量的减少幅度)。基于文献数据,我们表明这可能意味着在全国范围内至少有几万只刺猬得以存活。我们报告了有必要针对这一独特现象可能产生的人口统计学和遗传学影响展开深入研究。我们还提出疑问,新冠疫情对野生动物的影响将有多稳定,以及封锁(即人为休止)是否可能扭转包括刺猬在内的野生物种数量下降的负面趋势。