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FWC warns that wildlife meetings often dangerous
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By Herald Tribune
Originally Published June, 14 2008 at 12:18 AM Updated June, 14 2008 at 12:18 AM
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This time of year, wildlife is on the move.
Critters,
such as alligators, may be looking for new bodies of water or mates;
snakes may be searching for prey; bears may be foraging. While moving
from one point to another, wildlife sometimes comes face to face
with people. When that happens, the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission urges people to leave wild animals alone and
just let them pass through. The commission has responded to two situations where alligators have bitten people. On
May 15, the Volusia County Sheriff's Office received a call that an
alligator was at an apartment complex in Deltona. Officials notified a
licensed alligator trapper, but, in the meantime, a deputy sheriff
attempted to capture the 8-foot gator himself. The deputy sustained a
bite on his left leg and had to be airlifted to the hospital. Another
deputy shot the alligator several times before the trapper arrived and
killed it. In another incident on May 21, a 4-foot alligator made
its way to a woman's front yard near Vernon. She called the Washington
County Sheriff's Office and was told to leave the alligator alone and
eventually it would move on. Not satisfied with this sage advice, the
woman called a neighbor, who called a 16-year-old neighbor to remove
the reptile. As the young man attempted to catch the gator, he
was bitten on the hand. Another teenager rushed up and stabbed the
animal, still clamped down on his friend's hand. The injured teenager
was treated at an area hospital and will be fine. The alligator
was destroyed. Animals looking for new areas to forage, hunt or
mate do not typically pose a threat to people. Unfortunately, as
Florida's human population grows and development occurs in wildlife
habitats, conflicts will continue to occur. If a potentially
dangerous animal doesn't leave your yard, or persistently enters your
yard, call FWC's Wildlife Alert Hotline at 1-888-404-FWCC (3922).
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