🤦♂️ Just a reminder:OTHER ANIMALS COULD KILL A PERSON TOO (EVEN YOUR DOG!)! but currently almost no wolf really kill a person ...
https://t.me/WolfRights/65
https://t.me/WolfRights/76
2002 = 22 years ago: "Despite the low probability of wolf attacks on humans occurring, the risk is not zero ❗️❗️(AFD BULLSHIT!) and reaction procedures in terms of risk management wildlife must be put in place before such incidents occur ..."
This is perfectly fine! since animals kill animals, AND WE ARE ANIMALS TOO! so why they need to kill everyone, except humans, if we are animals too!
https://t.me/WolfRights/96
2002: Man-killing by tigers, lions, leopards, pumas and bears (brown bear, black bear, polar bear and sloth bear) occurs on a regular basis with hundreds of people being killed annually on a worldwide basis.
These reviews identified 12 species that have made multiple predatory attacks on humans, and another 5 species that are associated with anecdotal cases or where they have killed people when provoked. The former include three species of canids (dingo Canis dingo, coyote Canis latrans, grey wolf, Linnell et al. 2002; Fritts et al. 2003), five cat species and four bear species ...
Just another reminder:
ANIMALS KILL LESS HUMANS than humans kill other animals ...
The risks of wolf attacks in Europe/Scandinavia (and also in America of the North) seem very weak today, because recent cases are rare, despite the increase in the number of wolves. There is currently an estimated that there are between 10,000 and 20,000 wolves in Europe, 40,000
in Russia and 60,000 in North America. Even with this number of wolves, we only managed to find 4 people killed in Europe, 4 in Russia and none in North America by non-rabid wolves over the last 50 years.
Of these cases that involved 489 victims (with the highest degree of veracity and enough information to categorise them; Table 1), we categorised 67 as predatory attacks, 380 as rabid attacks, and 42 as provoked / defensive attacks.
https://t.me/WolfRights/65
https://t.me/WolfRights/76
2002 = 22 years ago: "Despite the low probability of wolf attacks on humans occurring, the risk is not zero ❗️❗️(AFD BULLSHIT!) and reaction procedures in terms of risk management wildlife must be put in place before such incidents occur ..."
This is perfectly fine! since animals kill animals, AND WE ARE ANIMALS TOO! so why they need to kill everyone, except humans, if we are animals too!
https://t.me/WolfRights/96
2002: Man-killing by tigers, lions, leopards, pumas and bears (brown bear, black bear, polar bear and sloth bear) occurs on a regular basis with hundreds of people being killed annually on a worldwide basis.
These reviews identified 12 species that have made multiple predatory attacks on humans, and another 5 species that are associated with anecdotal cases or where they have killed people when provoked. The former include three species of canids (dingo Canis dingo, coyote Canis latrans, grey wolf, Linnell et al. 2002; Fritts et al. 2003), five cat species and four bear species ...
Just another reminder:
ANIMALS KILL LESS HUMANS than humans kill other animals ...
The risks of wolf attacks in Europe/Scandinavia (and also in America of the North) seem very weak today, because recent cases are rare, despite the increase in the number of wolves. There is currently an estimated that there are between 10,000 and 20,000 wolves in Europe, 40,000
in Russia and 60,000 in North America. Even with this number of wolves, we only managed to find 4 people killed in Europe, 4 in Russia and none in North America by non-rabid wolves over the last 50 years.
Of these cases that involved 489 victims (with the highest degree of veracity and enough information to categorise them; Table 1), we categorised 67 as predatory attacks, 380 as rabid attacks, and 42 as provoked / defensive attacks.