50
Mixed
unknown
Hedgehogs hibernate in winter, with a temperature drop from 34 to 2°C and a breathing rate decrease from 40 to 8 breaths per minute. They eat a lot in early spring.
The claims about hedgehog hibernation involve temperature and breathing changes as well as feeding habits in spring. The evidence for the first claim shows typical temperature drops to around 7-10°C during hibernation, contradicting the stated 2°C. For the second claim, the normal breathing rate is 25–50 breaths, making a drop to 8 plausible but not confirmed by exact figures. The third claim, about feeding in spring, finds moderate support for increased feeding behavior post-hibernation.
Individual Claims
41
Mixed
Biology
In winter, hedgehogs go into hibernation and their temperature drops from 34 to 2°C.
Evidence suggests hedgehogs' temperature drops to around 7-10°C during hibernation, not down to 2°C as claimed. The claim is partially accurate but exaggerates the extent of temperature drop.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
40
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
30
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
40
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
41
Evidence Summary
No fact-check match; web evidence suggests temperature drops to 7-10°C, not 2°C.
46
Mixed
Biology
The breathing rate of hedgehogs decreases from 40 to 8 breaths per minute during hibernation.
Normal breathing rate is between 25-50 breaths, making a significant drop plausible but not exactly to 8 breaths. Lack of specific evidence for the exact rate during hibernation slightly weakens the claim's accuracy.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
50
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
40
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
45
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
46
Evidence Summary
No fact-check match; web evidence supports possibility but lacks exact figures.
62
Mostly True
Biology
In the first days of spring, hedgehogs eat everything in sight.
Evidence indicates that hedgehogs increase food intake after hibernation to regain energy, supporting the notion of increased feeding behavior, though 'everything in sight' exaggerates this.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
70
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
60
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
62
Evidence Summary
No fact-check match; web sources support increased eating post-hibernation.