A hedgehog's heart beats around 190 times per minute when active, but drops to just 20 beats per minute during hibernation.
A Hedgehog's Heart Slows from 190 to 20 Beats During Sleep
If you could hold a tiny stethoscope to an active hedgehog's chest, you'd hear a frantic drumbeat—around 190 beats per minute. That's more than twice the resting heart rate of a human adult. But here's where it gets truly remarkable: when winter arrives and that same hedgehog curls into a spiny ball for hibernation, its heart slows to a near-crawl of just 20 beats per minute.
This dramatic shift represents one of nature's most impressive physiological transformations. That's a 90% reduction in heart rate, all happening automatically as the hedgehog enters its deep winter sleep.
Why the Dramatic Slowdown?
Hibernation isn't just a long nap—it's a complete metabolic overhaul. When a hedgehog hibernates, its body temperature drops from around 95°F (35°C) to match its surroundings, sometimes as low as 50°F (10°C). With less heat to maintain and virtually no movement required, the heart can afford to beat much, much slower.
This energy-saving mode is crucial for survival. During the 4-6 months of hibernation, hedgehogs don't eat or drink. Every beat of the heart burns precious calories stored as body fat from their pre-winter feeding frenzy. By slowing their heart rate so drastically, they can stretch those fat reserves across the entire winter.
The In-Between Zone
Even when hedgehogs are just sleeping normally (not hibernating), their heart rate drops to around 147 beats per minute—still much faster than ours, but noticeably slower than their active state. These little creatures exist in distinct physiological gears:
- Active mode: 190-280 beats per minute
- Sleeping (non-hibernating): ~147 beats per minute
- Hibernation: 20 beats per minute or even lower
Not Just the Heart
The heart rate slowdown is just one part of the hibernation package. A hedgehog's breathing also becomes barely perceptible, dropping to as few as 10 breaths per hour. Their metabolism slows to a fraction of its normal rate. In this suspended state, they're not truly conscious—they can't be easily awakened, and they may not even wake if moved or touched.
This remarkable adaptation allows hedgehogs to survive harsh winters when their insect prey disappears. When spring arrives and temperatures warm, their heart gradually speeds back up, their metabolism reignites, and they emerge hungry, ready to hunt again.