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French region hatches action plan to save endangered hamster

Authorities in the French region of Alsace have launched an action plan to save a hamster facing extinction, more than two years after Europe's top court rapped Paris for neglecting the rodent.

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The Great Hamster of Alsace.

Authorities in the French region of Alsace have launched an action plan to save a hamster facing extinction, more than two years after Europe's top court rapped Paris for neglecting the rodent.

The five-year project will see farmers in the eastern region implement measures to try to encourage the reproduction of the Great Hamster of Alsace, which can grow to 25 centimetres long, has a brown and white face, a black belly, white paws and little round ears. It aims to raise the population to around 1,500 from 500 to 1,000 currently.

As part of the €3 million (HK$32 million) project announced by Alsace's regional council, farmers have pledged to grow plants or grains that the rodent likes - such as wheat or alfalfa - on parts of their fields. An action plan for the hamster had been put in place in 2007, but the European Court of Justice ruled in 2011 that France was still not doing enough to protect the furball, which hibernates for six months and spends the vast majority of its life alone.

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The hamster has been protected legally since 1993 but its numbers fell from 1,167 in 2001 to as few as 161 in 2007, although they have since gone up slightly.

The preferred grazing of the creature have largely been replaced by the more profitable maize, which it does not like.

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Farmers will therefore try planting a mix of maize and alfalfa, or leaving strips of plants in between each line of maize.

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