Hedgehog numbers have suffered rapid declines, conservationists warned as the species was listed as "near threatened" in a global assessment.
The latest update to the International Union for Conservation of Nature's (IUCN) Red List of threatened species has also found more than a third (38%) of the world's tree species are at risk of extinction.
And experts said migratory birds which visit these shores, including grey plover and dunlin, are seeing their conservation status worsen.
The conservation status of western European hedgehogs on the Red List has worsened from least concern to near threatened — which means that any further deterioration of its situation could see it listed as at risk of extinction globally.
The IUCN said the species' numbers are thought to have shrunk in more than half the countries where it lives, with national declines of 16-33% over the past 10 years.
The IUCN experts said hedgehogs are suffering from increasing human pressure, including increasingly intensive agriculture which damages their rural habitat, roads and urban development.
Responding to the report, Nida Al-Fulaij, chief executive for People's Trust for Endangered Species (PTES), said recent research showed that hedgehog populations are still struggling in the countryside despite showing signs of recovery in urban areas.
"The news that European hedgehogs have been reclassified by the IUCN as Near Threatened globally raises the alarm for this much-loved native species across their range," she said.
The latest IUCN Red List update also includes the first global tree assessment, including the majority of the world's tree species on the list for the first time, and revealing that 38% are threatened with extinction.
The highest proportion of threatened trees are found on islands, where they are at high risk due to deforestation for development and agriculture, invasive species, pests and diseases.
The IUCN also said climate change was increasingly threatening trees through sea level rise and more intense and frequent storms, especially in the tropics.
Habitat protection and restoration, as well as conservation in seed banks and botanic garden collections were critical to prevent extinctions, conservationists said.
Dr Grethel Aguilar, IUCN director general, said: "Trees are essential to support life on Earth through their vital role in ecosystems, and millions of people depend upon them for their lives and livelihoods."
The IUCN said trees now accounted for more than a quarter of species on the Red List, with the number of threatened trees more than double the number of all threatened birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians combined.
The IUCN Red List now includes 166,061 species, of which 46,337 are classed as threatened with extinction.
The update has been published as countries meet in Cali, Colombia, in the latest round of international talks aiming to halt and reverse what conservationists have described as "catastrophic" declines in nature.