PLoS Biology (Jan 2023)

A worldwide perspective on large carnivore attacks on humans.

  • Giulia Bombieri,
  • Vincenzo Penteriani,
  • Kamran Almasieh,
  • Hüseyin Ambarlı,
  • Mohammad Reza Ashrafzadeh,
  • Chandan Surabhi Das,
  • Nishith Dharaiya,
  • Rafael Hoogesteijn,
  • Almira Hoogesteijn,
  • Dennis Ikanda,
  • Włodzimierz Jędrzejewski,
  • Mohammad Kaboli,
  • Anastasia Kirilyuk,
  • Ashish Kumar Jangid,
  • Ravi Kumar Sharma,
  • Hadas Kushnir,
  • Babu Ram Lamichhane,
  • Alireza Mohammadi,
  • Octavio Monroy-Vilchis,
  • Joseph M Mukeka,
  • Igor Nikolaev,
  • Omar Ohrens,
  • Craig Packer,
  • Paolo Pedrini,
  • Shyamala Ratnayeke,
  • Ivan Seryodkin,
  • Thomas Sharp,
  • Himanshu Shekhar Palei,
  • Tom Smith,
  • Ashok Subedi,
  • Fernando Tortato,
  • Koji Yamazaki,
  • Maria Del Mar Delgado

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001946
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
p. e3001946

Abstract

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Large carnivores have long fascinated human societies and have profound influences on ecosystems. However, their conservation represents one of the greatest challenges of our time, particularly where attacks on humans occur. Where human recreational and/or livelihood activities overlap with large carnivore ranges, conflicts can become particularly serious. Two different scenarios are responsible for such overlap: In some regions of the world, increasing human populations lead to extended encroachment into large carnivore ranges, which are subject to increasing contraction, fragmentation, and degradation. In other regions, human and large carnivore populations are expanding, thus exacerbating conflicts, especially in those areas where these species were extirpated and are now returning. We thus face the problem of learning how to live with species that can pose serious threats to humans. We collected a total of 5,440 large carnivore (Felidae, Canidae, and Ursidae; 12 species) attacks worldwide between 1950 and 2019. The number of reported attacks increased over time, especially in lower-income countries. Most attacks (68%) resulted in human injuries, whereas 32% were fatal. Although attack scenarios varied greatly within and among species, as well as in different areas of the world, factors triggering large carnivore attacks on humans largely depend on the socioeconomic context, with people being at risk mainly during recreational activities in high-income countries and during livelihood activities in low-income countries. The specific combination of local socioeconomic and ecological factors is thus a risky mix triggering large carnivore attacks on humans, whose circumstances and frequencies cannot only be ascribed to the animal species. This also implies that effective measures to reduce large carnivore attacks must also consider the diverse local ecological and social contexts.