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Fatal Alligator Attacks in Florida have Residents Worried | |
Washington, DC 18 May 2006 |
Florida wildlife officials
are warning residents to avoid areas where alligators are on the prowl.
Three women have been killed by alligators recently, a disturbingly high number
compared to the rate in previous years. VOA's Melinda Smith looks at some
of the reasons why attacks have increased.
The alligator's normal habitat is the dense vegetation of Florida's marshes, rivers and lakes.
But in recent decades, much of that wetland has been used to accommodate the state's boom in housing and commercial construction. With more and more people moving to Florida, alligators have less room to roam.
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Kent Vilet |
University of Florida zoologist Kent Vliet says the posted wildlife warnings should be taken seriously. "You've got to be especially cautious anytime you're near water in Florida, and you have your dog with you, because alligators really key in to those things very rapidly and they get to thinking about feeding and they'll move in close and it's just a dangerous situation."
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Annemarie Campbell |
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Yovy Suarez Jimenez |
The body of a third woman was discovered in a canal near the city of St. Petersburg. Her death was also blamed on an alligator. Seventy-four-year-old Connie Gittles could have been the state's fourth fatality, if she hadn't grabbed her garden hose when an alligator nipped her on the leg:
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Connie Gittles |
Alligators are naturally predatory and can grow to much as four meters long. They often attack pets and livestock. This year's three fatalities bring the human death toll to 20 in the past 57 years.