June 23, 2018 Takepart, by John R. Platt
Last
week a group of lifeguards and tourists in the Dominican Republic
pulled a shark from the water and posed for photos with it until it
died.
It
was just the latest in a disturbing new trend of people trying to take
selfies with a wide variety of wildlife, ranging from seals and swans to
elk and even lions.
Sometimes,
as in the case of the shark, the animals die as a result of these
interactions. Other times people put themselves at risk. Last month a
Chinese man died while trying to take a selfie with a walrus at a zoo. A
year ago—long before the infamous case in which tourists put a bison
calf in their car—a visitor to Yellowstone National Park was gored and
tossed into the air by an adult bison while she tried to pose for a
photo just six yards away from the massive animal.
What drives this risky behavior?
Part
of it, it seems, is just human nature. “I think we’re drawn to what’s
left of wilderness,” said Margo DeMello, program director for
human-animal studies at the Animals and Society Institute. “We have a
desire to feel close to wildlife and wild animals.”
Unfortunately,
she said, modern society has left us detached from the reality of how
wild animals live and behave. “Other than pets, we’re very disconnected
from animals in our lives,” she said. “We don’t spend a lot of time near
and around animals the way our ancestors did.”
Even
our beloved pets don’t fill our need, DeMello said. “I think a lot of
people see domesticated animals as not ‘real animals.’ They’re a little
bit less than animals because of that domestication and because they’re
so common.” At the same time, pets habituate us to the idea that we can
touch and pick up animals, but that doesn’t quite satisfy our desires.
“A koala or a shark or a penguin is just so much closer to nature and
that thing we lack,” she said.
Adam
Roberts, chief executive of Born Free USA, said most people possess “a
profound affinity for wild animals” but noted that the modern world does
not fulfill that in a helpful way. “Zoo exhibits, barbarous circus
acts, and the ready availability of exotic animals as ‘pets’ and
television performers all dramatically desensitize people to animals’
very wildness,” he said. Numerous studies have shown that seeing animals
in commercials and other entertainment contexts disconnects people from
the idea that species have wild behaviors.
This
innate passion for animals and our lack of daily connection to them are
a dangerous combination. “The desire to be close to animals, the
opportunities to do so—plus the misguided, trusting belief that it must
be safe—results in people taking massive, dangerous risks for a mere
photo opportunity,” Roberts said.
This
hazardous behavior may be enhanced by social networking and the need
for “likes,” clicks, and shares. “We’re in this highly self-promotional
social media age where we need to not just document everything we do but
place ourselves into it as a way to document the experience and share
it with others,” DeMello said. Indeed, many recent wildlife selfies have
gone viral, something that may inspire other people to take similar
risks.
DeMello
said most people really do know better, but the sight of wild animals
creates a cognitive dissonance between the desire to be close to them
and the understanding of how they should be treated. “We know that
certain things are better for animals—not pulling a shark out of the
ocean, for example—and yet that competes with that desire to be close
and near. The desire overwhelms our sense of what’s OK, and we don’t
even think about it or realize it anymore,” she said.
One
element affecting that is that people tend to ignore posted warning
signs or instructions not to interact with animals. “I think a lot of
people feel like they know better,” DeMello said. “They feel, maybe the
people who wrote the sign don’t know enough or don’t care enough.”
That,
in a way, helps to justify grabbing an animal in the wild, even when it
ends in tragedy. “We have to justify that to ourselves in some way so
that we don’t feel bad,” DeMello said. “Nobody wants to be a killer.”
Unfortunately,
these behaviors may only get worse. “I think it’s going to continue as
we get more urbanized and isolated from the world outside of us,” she
said.
Is
there a solution? DeMello isn’t sure. “I think we’ve got to acknowledge
that this is part of us, and then figure out a way to provide that
extra layer of education that acknowledges that people aren’t going to
want to stop reaching out and touching and grabbing,” she said.
Until
then, she said, publicizing the stories with bad endings may be the
most effective way to get across to people that they shouldn’t put an
animal, or themselves, at risk for the sake of a selfie.
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