The Bremerton Marina in Washington.Photo:Getty
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According toa press releasefrom the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife (WDFW), a child was visiting the Bremerton Marina, located east of Seattle, on Thursday, Sept. 12, when a “human-river otter incident” occurred.
The WDFW said that officers received a report at around 9:30 a.m. from the child’s mother, who said a river otter pulled her child off the dock they were walking down. The otter then dragged the child underwater, and the child came back up above the surface after a few moments.
The Bremerton Marina in Washington.Getty
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“We are grateful the victim only sustained minor injuries, due to the mother’s quick actions and child’s resiliency,” WDFW sergeant Ken Balazs said in the press release. “We would also like to thank the Port of Bremerton for their quick coordination and communication to their marina tenants.”
According to the release, officers requested that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Wildlife Services trap and kill otters in the marina. One animal was found near the dock where the child was attacked, and the WDFW said it was taken to a lab for testing, particularly for rabies.
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North American river otter (stock image).Getty
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The WDFW also said in its press release that river otters are commonly found across Washington, in both fresh and saltwater bodies of water. People canlegally trap themwith a trapping license during open season, and the department also said they can be legally killed or trapped if they are “damaging crops or domestic animals.”
“Although encounters with river otters are rare, they can be territorial and, like any wildlife, are inherently unpredictable,” the department stated, noting that there have been six documented incidents between humans and river otters within the past 10 years.
This is not the only otter attack to make headlines in the past week. TheNew York Postreported on Wednesday, Sept. 11, that a woman in Malaysia was jogging in Tanjung Aru Recreation Park in Sabah when a group of otters approached her and attacked her, biting her and leaving her bloodied.
A park official said that the otters may have had a “change in behavior” because of visitors feeding the animals, and added that the woman was transported to a hospital and treated for her injuries.
source: people.com