A large crowd gathered for the first evening talk of the 2024/25 programme of events by Tisbury and District Natural History Society and, unusually, after the notices and a welcome to our speaker had been given, an audience member told an anecdote related to the subject. Many years ago, in a terraced house in London, Mike awoke in the middle of the night to find a hedgehog snuffling around his pillow! How did it get there? Mike hoped that Abi might enlighten him!
Dr Abi Gazzard has spent many years studying hedgehogs in Earley, Reading as the subject of her Masters and PHD. She now works for the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust. Abi’s talk was divided into four sections: The hedgehog family Research: garden use Research: nest box studies Hedgehogs: research and you! Hedgehogs are members of the erinaceidae family. This makes them close relatives of moles and shrews. They are NOT rodents. Not all hedgehogs are spiny and there are nineteen types of hedgehog known today – the most recent was identified as recently as December 2023. Hedgehogs are: nocturnal, solitary, not territorial, weigh between 500g and 1500g, primarily insectivorous, build nests under cover and hibernate during the winter. Citizen science surveys have shown a steep and rapid decline in population sizes over the past twenty years in rural areas however, in urban areas, the population numbers appear to be stable. There is limited knowledge about the answers to why numbers are decreasing in rural areas or stabilising in urban areas. Abi’s research area was in Earley, Reading, a suburban area with mixed, high density housing and no badgers (badgers are the major predators of hedgehogs). She used GPS and radio tags to track the hedgehogs in the area. The surveys were nocturnal and also relied heavily on community engagement. Abi observed twenty-eight hedgehogs over nine nights each. A male hedgehog visited three front gardens and nine back gardens and covered a distance of 3.5 hectares per night while the female hedgehogs visited an average of five front gardens and seven back gardens and covered 0.7 hectares per night. Both sexes preferred the garden of terraced houses. Amenity grassland was less preferred to gardens. The factors which affected the time spent in gardens negatively were a lack of access between the front and back garden, foxes, rainfall and plentiful other gardens nearby. The positive factors were shorter nights (summer), supplementary feeding and compost heaps. Abi posed the question, does supplementary feeding result in the thriving urban population? We do not know the answer. More research is needed. Abi then turned to the question, what makes a good nest box? There were over five thousand responses to a hedgehog housing census. The use of hedgehog houses was found to be linked to garden factors, nest box placement and resource providing. A good hedgehog house depends on the design and also microclimates. There are significant research gaps in:- nest box efficiency, supplementary feeding, population parameters, urban hazards and rural hedgehogs. What can you do to help? If you are a garden owner you could consider any hazards, the connectivity between gardens, providing food and shelter; you could log sightings; look out for sick and injured hedgehogs and take them to a hedgehog rescue; take part in a questionnaire, survey and other citizen science project. Spread the message! Emma Procter Wiltshire & Swindon Biological Records Centre (WSBRC) have chosen Tisbury for their inaugural Wiltshire Recorders Forum, to be held at The Victoria Hall on Sunday 13th October.
Peter Shallcross and Inés López-Dóriga will be giving presentations alongside others from local groups, organisations and individuals with an interest in biological recording and monitoring wildlife in Wiltshire. This event is free and you will find the programme on the eventbrite link below when you reserve your place. 80 spaces available, please book here: www.eventbrite.com/e/wsbrc-wiltshire-recorders-forum-tickets-1027878380907 Date: Sunday 13th October, 10-4pm Venue: The Victoria Hall in Tisbury, 5a High Street, Tisbury SP3 6HD Free Parking at: Nadder Close, Tisbury SP3 6JJ Alternative Parking at Tisbury Station and around the village. Refreshments and a light lunch will be provided. Dr Abbi Gazzard will be with us at at the Victoria Hall on Tisbury High Street on Thursday 10th October at 7:30pm (doors, and the bar will be open from 7:00). ![]() Abi, who lives in Westbury, is a Programme Officer working as a member of the Species Survival Commission (SSC) Small Mammal Specialist Group for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). She is based at the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, an international charity headquartered at Jersey Zoo in the Channel Islands, that works to save species from extinction. As Abi says “I wanted to be able to help wildlife, so conservation was the direction for me. I was lucky to spend some time studying hedgehogs and this interest ultimately led me into the world of small mammal research. Small mammals are inspiring in their own right! They may be little, but creatures like moles, rats, squirrels and porcupines can play big roles in ecosystems.” As with all our events, this meeting is free if you’re a member of the Society or under 21, and you’ll be very welcome to come as a guest visitor for the payment of £2. We are pleased to announce that Jolyon Medlock will now be giving his talk "Ticks, mosquitoes and their diseases" on Thursday 28th November at 7:30pm. This has been re-scheduled from Sept. Please note that the Tisbury Natural History Society will now be having two talks during November and we'll send a reminder out nearer the date.
As the leaves begin to fall from the hedgerows, the fluffy, spherical blooms of Clematis vitalba become ever more noticeable. This is known as traveller’s joy or old man’s beard, an extremely vigorous climbing plant which scrambles through hedgerow and woodland. After flowering in late summer, the plant is clothed in silver grey seedheads, which last into the winter. At a time when the countryside can become a bit featureless, these clouds of silver can catch the sun and brighten things up for any kind of traveller.
The seed heads are made up of a collection of seeds, attached to each of which is a silky, feather-like, appendage. These catch the wind and help to spread the seed, which also provides food for birds. The thousands of seeds each plant produces each autumn, combined with such an efficient means of distribution means it can be found almost anywhere in southern Britain. It does, though, favour lime-rich soils, which explains why it is so common hereabouts. Traveler's joy is the food plant of a number of moths, including the pretty chalk carpet and small emerald moths, both of which are common hereabouts. The rapidly growing stems are ridged and become tough and fibrous as they age. You can often find tremendously long stems hanging down to the woodland floor from where they have clambered up to the light in the canopy. These are very strong and make ideal ropes for children to play at being Tarzan. This strength led it to being used in the past for weaving, making rope and other bindings. Unfortunately, traveller’s joy was ill-advisedly introduced as a garden plant to New Zealand. Its seeds were soon blown out into the native forests where it has become a menace, growing rampantly through the canopy, shading out the plants on the woodland floor and in some cases breaking down trees with its weight. Andrew Graham |
Photo: Avocets (Izzy Fry)
The headers display photos taken by our members. Do get in touch via the Contact Form if you'd like to submit a photo for selection.
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