
A wolf has bitten a human in Germany for the first time since the species returned to the country, authorities said on Tuesday.
The incident on Monday saw a woman injured near an IKEA store in the northern city of Hamburg.
Officers captured the animal later in the evening near the Binnenalster pier in the city centre, pulling it from the water using a snare, a police spokesman said.
"There has not been a case like this since the repopulation [of wolves] in 1998," a spokeswoman for the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation told dpa.
The wolf was considered extinct in Germany for around 150 years, but began repopulating the country from Poland around the turn of the century. The process was natural and not a purposeful reintroduction.
Today, an estimated 1,600 wolves roam the forests of several northern German states, but experts warn that their growing number means encounters with humans are becoming more likely.
Klaus Hackländer, a wolf expert at the German Wildlife Foundation, said it was realistic that the animal that bit the woman in Hamburg was indeed a wolf.
"The likelihood of a wolf venturing into a settlement or even a city is high due to the large number of wolves we now have," he added.
The growing wolf population has also posed problems for farmers, leading the Bundestag - Germany's lower house of parliament - to pass a bill allowing wolves to be shot in certain conditions earlier this month.
The bill was passed in the upper house, the Bundesrat, on Friday.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
A Manual for Nations to Head out To - 2
A volcanic eruption may have catalyzed the plague's arrival in Europe, study suggests - 3
Popular Home Rug Series For You - 4
Instructions to Shield Your Gold Speculation from Possible Dangers: Fundamental Protections - 5
Flu illness count nears 5 million, with New York City among the hardest hit
Vote In favor of Your Number one Game Control center
Pick Your #1 Kind Of Bread
7 Straightforward Moves toward Move Information from Your Old Cell phone to Your New One: A Thorough Aide
Sea Ice Hits New Low in Hottest Year on Record for the Arctic
6 U.S. States for Climbing
What you need to know about Trump accounts as Michael and Susan Dell donate $6 billion to the new early childhood investment program
Turkey key underlying issue as Israel, Greece, Cyprus hold summit
Passover under fire: Israelis balance fatigue with cautious hope after month of war
Saucony's $125 'Comfy, Stylish' Sneakers Are Now $55













