
23-03-2007
yeah accidents will happen - but the difference between a parrot and a cheetah is that in one case a person could at worse loose a finger, in the other a severe mauling or possibly their life.
i'm sure even a cheetah is capable of killing a small school-aged child.
elephants are potentially the most dangerous of all, in terms of the damage and speed at which the can inflict it, however they are, unlike tigers and other big cats, a little more predicatable and easier to judge in my opinion (though i know many a keeper has been killed by elephants). i would not be supprised if in most cased of elephant attacks there was, if looking back, some sort of indication that the animal was not happy about something.
my point? that with elephants should you take every precation necessary and always keep the closest attention to the animals mood, the pros of unrestrained contact between elephants and people might actually be worth the minimised risk (for both animals and people).
still, whilst i'm prepared to take the risk and have contact with elephants, i think if a person or their family was killed or injured by an unexpected encounter with one on the trail of the melbourne zoo, they would have every right to sue the pants off of the zoo.
large carnivores like tigers on the otherhand are just too unpredictable. its just asking for trouble. an elephant doesnt eat other large animals in the wild. attacking unprovoked is not part of its instinct. tigers kill other animals for a living and a big bald ape is no exception - especially when they $%#@ off and stop telling it what to do...
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