Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
A garden dormouse in 2007
A garden dormouse in 2007 - Credit: Arno Laurent / Wikimedia Commons - License: CC-BY-SA
Tech
Nature
Limburg
Dormouse
Garden Dormouse
endangered species
Mammal Society
rodent
China
Giant Panda
Gliridae
Limburg-Zuid
Monday, 19 December 2022 - 11:10

Share this article:

Limburg to restore the habitat of the critically endangered garden dormouse

The province of Limburg, along with municipalities in the southern region of the province and site managers will restore the habitat of the critically endangered garden dormouse over the next four years. In the Netherlands, the animal is only found in the southern Limburg area. Until recently, little was known about it.

Last year, scientists, several zoos and conservationists investigated what needs to be done to save the garden dormouse from extinction in the Netherlands. Known in Dutch as the eikelmuis, a portmanteau of the words for acorn and mouse, but it is not a mouse, and it does not eat acorns.

The animal is a rodent that is part of the Gliridae family, and it resembles a squirrel. Until now, there were hardly any known images of the garden dormouse in the wild. Researchers during the study managed to capture the animals on video for the first time. "A garden dormouse in the Netherlands is much more endangered than a giant panda in China. But everyone knows the panda and hardly anyone knows the garden dormouse," said the Dutch Mammal Society.

Garden dormice prefer to live in old forests with natural tree cavities, research determined. They mainly use nest boxes in forests without old trees. Garden dormice have also been found in bird nests. The animals look for food in dense undergrowth and they have a preference for blackberries, gooseberries, common hazel, elderberries and red currants. They also eat insects, snails and spiders. The garden dormice avoid open fields, and need contiguous hedges and bushes in their habitat.

The Dutch Mammal Society will screen a short film about the garden dormouse on its website on Monday afternoon.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
Giant panda Wu Wen and her cub, Lang Yue, in October 2024
Giant panda cub born at Ouwehands Zoo in July named after Rembrandt
Image
Baby panda born at Ouwehands Zoo in Rhenen, 12 July 2024
Video: Another baby giant panda born at Ouwehands Zoo in Netherlands
Image
Giant panda Fan Xing at Ouwehands Dierenpark in Rhenen.
First Dutch-born giant panda to depart for China on Wednesday
Image
Researcher in a laboratory
Minister scraps proposal for extensive screening of foreign researchers
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch military tests camp design for Russian war prisoners in Marnehuizen
  • NS and Deutsche Bahn plan up to six daily trains between Amsterdam and Rhine-Ruhr region
  • E. coli boil water advisory for 200,000 in Dordrecht, Zwijndrecht, Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht
  • Train service restored around Woerden after substation fire forces 1,300 evacuations
  • No additional victims found after Amsterdam fitness center explosion that injured seven

Top stories

  • Dutch military tests camp design for Russian war prisoners in Marnehuizen
  • E. coli boil water advisory for 200,000 in Dordrecht, Zwijndrecht, Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht
  • No additional victims found after Amsterdam fitness center explosion that injured seven
  • Several arrests made in connection with Amsterdam explosion; Ties to ATM burglary crew
  • Locals heard argument before Amsterdam blast that hurt 7; Police still focused on rescue

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content