by Gina
Marinex, 8/21/18, Time
The death of
Cassandra Cline, a 45-year-old elementary school teacher, who
was killed by a 9-foot alligator while protecting her dog on
Hilton Head Island Monday made headlines around the world.
Fatal
alligator attacks are rare – rare enough that they attract a lot of attention
when they happen. But dangerous human-gator interactions are starting to happen
more frequently because people are moving deeper into alligators’ habitat, says
University of Florida professor Frank Mazzotti.
“People
building homes where alligators live have caused the increase in attacks,”
Mazzotti, a wildlife expert with the University of Florida’s Fort Lauderdale
Research and Education Center, tells TIME
Florida,
which has the most human-alligator interactions, has recorded 24 deadly
alligator attacks since 1948 – but 14 of those have occurred in the last 20
years, according to Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission data.
There were an average of about 10 alligator bites a year in the 2010s, compared
with an average of eight a year in the 1980s.
The last
reported case of a fatal alligator attack in the U.S was in June. Shizuka
Matsuki, 47, was last seen walking her two dogs in South Florida before her
body was found miles away in a lake in Davie, Florida. Before that, Bonnie
Walker, 90, wandered off her senior living center and was killed in an attack
in Charleston, South Carolina in 2016.
Despite what
seems to be increasing frequency, Mazzotti says attacks are still remarkably
rare, considering the number of alligators in southeastern U.S. There are an
estimated 100,000 alligators in South Carolina alone.“Alligators do not have an
instinct to attack humans,” he says.
In many
instances, there are several of factors that contribute to an alligator attack.
Mazzotti says he believes a major factor in Cline’s death was her dog, which
alligators perceive as food.
“A good
comparison would be that a dog is like what a bowl of pasta or chicken is to a
human, when an alligator sees a dog they see their next meal,” he says. “When
nuisance trappers go into an area with gators they’ll often play a recording of
a dog barking and the gators will come and investigate.”
Mazzotti
says people need to be aware of their surrounding when they are near water or
in areas where they have been alligator sightings.
He adds:
“Don’t let your dog run free. Treat your dog like you would treat your child.
But, there’s
a caveat. If a person is in the unfortunate situation where an alligator
attacks a pet, Mazzotti says it’s best not to get in the alligator’s way.
His
recommendation for anyone who does get attacked by an alligator: “Fight like
your life depends on it.
“Poke the
gator in the eyes and try to ram your hand down its throat,” he advises.
“Alligators will often reposition its bite, take advantage of that to get away.
Also make yourself appear as big as possible, the bigger you appear, the less
likely the gator is to engage.”
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