A woman has been bitten by a wolf in a busy German shopping district, in what is believed to be the first such attack since the animals returned to Germany in 1998. Authorities confirmed the incident occurred on Monday evening before the wolf was later retrieved from a city lake.
The woman was transported to a Hamburg hospital following the unusual encounter, according to German news agency dpa. Her condition remained unknown on Tuesday, and police have not disclosed the exact location of her injuries or what prompted the attack.
The incident took place in a retail area near Altona station, situated west of Hamburg’s city centre.
Mapped: Altona station
Late on Monday, police officers successfully pulled the wolf from the Binnenalster lake in downtown Hamburg, responding to multiple reports of the animal’s presence. Local media outlets have since reported that the wolf has been moved to an enclosure on the outskirts of the city.
Officials believe it’s likely that the wolf involved was the same one that was sighted in Blankenese, an outer suburb of the city, over the weekend.
Experts believe that animal is a young wolf searching for a territory of its own that accidentally wandered into the city. Hamburg’s regional government noted that wolves generally avoid contact with people and dogs, and the unusual urban environment would be very stressful.
Germany‘s Federal Agency for Nature Conservation said it was the first time a person was known to have been attacked by a wild wolf since the animals reappeared in the country after 150 years’ absence nearly 30 years ago, dpa reported.
Wolf attacks on livestock in Europe have been a growing concern to farmers for years, however. Last year, the European Parliament voted to change wolves’ status from “strictly protected” to “protected.”
Last week, the German parliament gave final approval to legislation making it easier to shoot wolves that kill or wound livestock.
The news comes in the wake of calls and proposals to reintroduce large predators to parts of the UK and Ireland centuries after they disappeared.
These calls spark debate, with livestock farmers tending to raise concern in relation to predators at the top of the food chain like lynx and wolves.
The issue hit the headlines again earlier last year after the illegal release of four Eurasian lynx into the Scottish Highlands.