10 June 2026, 17:32

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New studies: Lynx in Switzerland remains threatened despite comeback

To mark Lynx Day on 11 June 2026, two new scientific studies confirm that the survival of the lynx in Switzerland is by no means assured, despite some 360 animals in the Alpine and Jura regions.

Wild beim Wild editorial team — 10 June 2026

Traffic accidents, a barely recorded level of poaching and congenital heart defects resulting from genetic impoverishment continue to take their toll on Europe's largest wild cat.

On 10 June 2026, to mark the international day of action, WWF Switzerland presented two recent studies that paint a sobering picture. Fifty years after its reintroduction, the lynx is regarded as a rare success story of Swiss species conservation. Yet the data show that humans remain by far the greatest danger to the shy predator.

Traffic is the most common cause of death, poaching remains in the dark

An analysis of the mortality and diseases of free-ranging lynx, published in the journal PLOS ONE, concludes that collisions on roads and railways remain the number one cause of death. The study also documents illegal killings. The researchers' assessment is crucial here: the actual extent of poaching is likely to be significantly underestimated owing to a high number of unreported cases.

This assessment matches what Wild beim Wild has been documenting for years. A study by the University of Bern already showed in 2020 that illegal killings held back lynx populations in Valais massively over the years. How structural the problem is becomes clear in the dossier on poaching and hunting crime in Switzerland: national statistics are lacking, proceedings are discontinued, and perpetrators from the hobby hunting milieu go unpunished in most cases. As recently as October 2025, in the canton of Fribourg a poached mother lynx was found dead, and her orphaned cubs had little chance of survival. The article Bludgeoned lynx in Alsace: France punishes harshly, Switzerland stays almost silent.

shows that Switzerland is strikingly lenient in punishing illegal lynx killings compared with other countries.

The second study, published in the Journal of Wildlife Diseases, documents subaortic stenosis in four free-living lynx: a congenital narrowing in the heart that makes pumping blood more difficult. This malformation is normally extremely rare in wild cats. The researchers see a possible connection with the low genetic diversity of the Swiss populations, all of which descend from a handful of animals released in the 1970s.

This turns genetic impoverishment from an abstract technical term into a concrete health risk: inbreeding shows up directly in diseased hearts. The central role the lynx plays for intact forests and stable wildlife populations is explained in the background article on the importance of the lynx for the preservation of biodiversity.

Around 360 lynx: Switzerland bears a special responsibility

According to the WWF, around 360 lynx live in the cross-border Alpine and Jura region, most of them in Switzerland. «Switzerland connects the lynx populations in the Alps and the Jura. This gives rise to a particular responsibility to link these habitats effectively», WWF lynx expert Gabor von Bethlenfalvy is quoted as saying in the statement. The lynx influences the wildlife population and thereby strengthens the stability of the forests.

As solutions, the WWF cites connected habitats, targeted releases for genetic refreshment, international cooperation and consistent scientific monitoring.

Protection on paper is not enough

The lynx is strictly protected under the Federal Act on Hunting and the Protection of Wild Mammals and Birds (JSG, SR 922.0). The new studies show, however, that this protected status is worth little as long as poaching systematically stays under the radar and violations are rarely pursued consistently. Anyone wanting to keep the lynx in Switzerland in the long term must not only build wildlife corridors, but also put an end to the structural impunity surrounding illegal kills.

More on the topic of hobby hunting: In our dossier on hunting we bring together fact checks, analyses and background reports.

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