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Italy: Pensioner in South Tyrol badly mauled by foxes - but he died of hypothermia

2024-02-24T13:22:40.970Z

Highlights: Italy: Pensioner in South Tyrol badly mauled by foxes - but he died of hypothermia. It is clear that these wounds came from neither a wolf nor a dog but from several foxes. The body temperature was only 22 degrees, according to the autopsy report. The skin injuries found “appear to be due to the impact of animals, probably canines, as there are abrasions on the skin that indicate an animal bite” The injuries did not affect any vital organs.



As of: February 24, 2024, 2:09 p.m

By: Johannes Welte

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A missing man was found in South Tyrol with bite wounds all over his body.

Now it is clear: several foxes had mauled him while he was still alive.

The pensioner died in hospital, but from hypothermia

Update from February 24th, 1:10 p.m.:

After examining the DNA of the predators that inflicted large wounds on the living pensioner, it is clear that these wounds came from neither a wolf nor a dog but from several foxes.

The Italian broadcaster RAI

reported this on Saturday (February 24th)

.

Due to the bite injuries, the carabinieri initially assumed that the 73-year-old man could have been attacked by a dog, wolf or jackal and suffered fatal injuries.

The autopsy showed that the bite wounds were not fatal; the man had frozen to death.

According to

IppenDigital

, he was suffering from an illness, so he may have fallen and been unconscious when the foxes attacked him.

Update from February 21st, 11:10 p.m.:

The case is becoming more and more mysterious.

The death of a 73-year-old puzzled investigators.

The Bolzano public prosecutor's office announced that the man died of severe hypothermia and not of the injuries inflicted on him by an as yet unknown animal.

The body temperature was only 22 degrees, according to the autopsy report.

The skin injuries found “appear to be due to the impact of animals, probably canines, as there are abrasions on the skin that indicate an animal bite.” The injuries did not affect any vital organs.

In fact, locals report that the man was missing body parts.

The results of a DNA analysis should be available by Thursday, which should clarify which animal it was.

The portal

puls24.at

reports, citing the carabinieri, that they suspect the family's guard dog of having inflicted the bite wounds on the 73-year-old.

First report from February 19, 2024:

Feldthurns - The municipality of Feldthurns in South Tyrol is located on the Brenner motorway - between the South Tyrolean towns of Klausen and Brixen on the eastern slopes of the Sarntal Alps, from which you can enjoy a dream panorama of the Dolomites.

But this idyll in northern Italy is overshadowed by a terrible event.

South Tyrolean pensioner bitten to death by a “dog-like animal” – “We are all shocked”

“We are all shocked.” Mayor Konrad Messner still can’t believe it.

A citizen of Feldthurns was killed by an animal.

“It was said to have been a wolf or a dog,” reports Messner.

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What happened?

The pensioner Albert S. (73), father of three adult daughters, took a trip to the neighboring town of Pinzagen, six kilometers away on the outskirts of Brixen, on Sunday afternoon (February 18th).

There he stopped at an inn and drank some mineral water.

In the evening, he said that he wanted to go for a walk to a winery where friends should give him a lift in the car.

But Albert S. never arrived at the retirement home in Feldthurns where he lived.

At around 9:30 p.m., the family informed by the home alerted the emergency call center.

Fire brigade, search dogs and mountain rescuers searched the area - without success.

It was only on Monday morning (February 19th) that a couple walking their dogs found the missing man seriously injured on a hiking trail in a meadow, just 50 meters from a terraced housing estate.

Albert S. was lying about 450 meters from the restaurant where he was last seen alive.

Mayor: “He must have looked pretty bad”

“He was said to have looked pretty bad,” reports Messner.

Albert S. was still breathing; according to the

Dolomiten

newspaper , he had severe bite injuries and scratches on his neck, arms, upper and lower abdomen.

Emergency services at the site where the seriously injured South Tyrolean was found.

It was discovered underneath the natural stone wall.

© Tschotsch Fire Department/Facebook

A local resident tells

IPPEN.MEDIA

that parts of the victim's face were missing.

The pensioner was flown to the Bolzano clinic, where he later died from his serious injuries.

The carabinieri took DNA traces to clarify which animal had inflicted the fatal injuries on the 73-year-old.

The results are expected on Wednesday (February 21).

Experts consider an attack by a wolf to be very unlikely

Is it possible that a wolf was the “perpetrator”?

Uwe Friedel, wolf expert at the Association for Nature Conservation in Bavaria, considers a wolf attack to be very unlikely: “Wolf attacks on people are extremely rare.” The probability of being attacked by a feral dog is much higher.

Friedel continued: “None of the reasons we know from other regions of the world for wolf attacks on people exist in South Tyrol.

There are enough wild animals that it can kill, and there is no rabies there either.”

Defensive behavior could also be ruled out since the event apparently occurred in an open field and the animal was therefore given an opportunity to escape.

Friedel: “The wolf generally avoids contact with humans.” The last wolf sighting in the region was a year ago.

Mayor Messner doesn't know anything about feral dogs either.

Did a wolf kill the pensioner?

A DNA analysis should provide certainty.

© Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/dpa

In a study by the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, the largest number of wolf attacks on humans (380) that occurred between 2002 and 2020 in the wolf's range in Europe, Asia and North America were due to rabies.

42 occurred as part of defensive behavior, 67 attacks as part of foraging behavior.

Forty-two of the foraging attacks occurred in Iran, ten in Israel and six in North America.

Six people died in Iran, one in Tajikistan and one person each in Canada and the USA.

In 18 years, 26 people around the world were killed by wolves - the majority of the animals had rabies

Friedel: “I remember a case a few years ago in Alaska in which a jogger was killed by wolves while hunting.

This usually happens due to a lack of food, which is why it occurs mainly in dry and very cold regions that are therefore poor in game.” It could also happen that wolves are attracted by people.

In June 2020, a wolf attacked joggers in southern Italy.

It turned out that he had been fed by tourists and had genetic traces from dogs.

He was captured.

A total of 26 people were killed by wolf attacks worldwide between 2002 and 2020, 14 of which were caused by animals suffering from rabies, nine while searching for food and three due to defensive behavior.

Not a single person in Europe had lost their life to wolves.

Not far from the terrible event, there had been a rockfall on the Brenner state road just days ago.

A few days earlier, large rocks even rolled onto the Brenner motorway.

In neighboring Trentino, nature also struck with rock falls on roads.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-24

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