Avoid encounters with these wild animals

'It is therefore advisable to keep your distance and show due respect to wild animals and to avoid handling them, as far as possible'

Which wild animals are the most dangerous to people in South Africa?

This question is likely to result in lively debate, with answers possibly varying between the lion, the crocodile and even the lumbering two-ton hippo – all of which people need to be particularly wary of.

The Herald recently reported on a leopard that mauled a toddler in the KNP.

Read: KNP: 2-year-old mauled to death by leopard in Malelane camp

In less than a week an elephant trampled a security guard outside Phalaborwa.

Read: Phalaborwa: Security guard trampled to death by elephant

And if that was not enough, a pride of lions were seen roaming around on the outskirts of Phalaborwa town, which made headlines nationally.

Watch: Foskor pride spotted on mine premises in Phalaborwa

A recent review of Medibank data for the years 2015 to 2018 were released.

The review were conducted on patients attended to at the 45 emergency departments at Netcare hospitals around the country following attacks and bites by wild animals.

It revealed that that the animals responsible for the most patients seen at emergency facilities during the past four years were the elephant, followed by snakes and Africa’s largest antelope, the eland.

Mande Toubkin, Netcare’s general manager: emergency, trauma, transplant and CSI, cautions: “Animals, and particularly wild animals, act on instinct and can therefore be unpredictable by nature. It is therefore important to remember that wild animals in particular can be potentially aggressive and even dangerous, and that due care should be exercised when around them, no matter their size or apparent temperament.”

Keep your distance from all wild animals no matter their size or apparent temperament

“We all know to avoid snakes and that elephants can be dangerous when agitated or encountered in the wild. However, the eland came as rather a surprise. During the period under review a total of 10 patients were assisted at the Netcare emergency departments for elephant attacks,many of which had a high injury severity score, which is an established medical score to assess trauma severity, and which sadly also resulted in some deaths,” Toubkin said.

She noted that the high number of cases related to attacks by elephant, which usually trample their victims, is of some concern.

The World Wildlife Fund observes that elephant populations are becoming increasingly stressed due to humans encroaching on their territories, and the high incidence of poaching of elephants in certain areas.

It notes that this encroachment is increasingly bringing people not only into greater contact with elephants, but also other kinds of wild animals.

“Attacks by crocodiles, giraffes and hyenas were responsible for two cases each over this time. That a giraffe can pose a risk may come as a great surprise to many of us, but last year a man was fatally kicked in the stomach by one of these large and powerful animals, while there were also other recorded instances of giraffe attacks in 2018 that were not attended to at our Netcare emergency departments. These include an attack on a mother and child by a female giraffe that had apparently given birth to a calf shortly before the attack.”

Read: Mother and son critical after giraffe attack in Hoedspruit

While we may think of the hyena as a spineless scavenger, they have exceptionally powerful jaws, do sometimes hunt and there are recorded instances of them having attacked humans.

Toubkin says there were also cases following attacks by lion, hippo and buffalo, animals that are considered some of the most dangerous in Africa. There were also instances of attacks by wildebeest and a shark, while an imported tiger is recorded as having injured a child who had to spend six days in hospital in 2016,” adds Toubkin.

She notes that Medibank data does not include trauma and emergency statistics for state sector or other private emergency and trauma services, and therefore do not provide a comprehensive national picture of injuries and deaths caused by wild animals.

“The study does, however, high light the need for us all to be aware that all kinds of wild animals, large and small, can potentially behave unpredictably and aggressively in certain situations and may pose a threat to the unwary. It is therefore advisable to keep your distance and show due respect to wild animals and to avoid handling them, as far as possible. It is particularly important to stay away from wild animals that are with their young. In addition, captive wild animals are implicated in a relatively large number of incidents and should never be considered to be tame and ‘safe’ to handle.”

“We urge South Africans and visitors to our country to always be careful, and to take precautions, when they encounter a wild animal of any size and within any context. The same point can be made of some of the apparently domesticated animals that are not familiar to you,” concludes Toubkin.

 

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