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A Florida Man Has Been Killed By His Pet Cassowary

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Tom Hale

Tom is a writer in London with a Master's degree in Journalism whose editorial work covers anything from health and the environment to technology and archaeology.

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A southern cassowary at Daintree National Park. Torsten Pursche/Shutterstock

With nicknames like “living dinosaur” and “the world’s most dangerous bird,” you'd be correct to assume it’s a dangerous game to keep a cassowary as a pet.

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Marvin Hajos, a 75-year-old farm owner, was killed by his pet cassowary near Alachua in northern Florida on Friday, April 12, local CNN affiliate WCJB reports.

Emergency services received an unusual phone call from a man saying an exotic bird had attacked somebody on the property. The man was reportedly still alive when first responders arrived on the scene, but he died on the way to the hospital as a result of his injuries.

"It looks like it was accidental. My understanding is that the gentleman was in the vicinity of the bird and at some point fell. When he fell, he was attacked," Jeff Taylor, deputy chief of Alachua County Fire Rescue, told The Gainesville Sun.

Cassowaries are large flightless birds that can grow over 1.8 meters (~6 feet) tall and weigh over 45 kilograms (99 pounds). Although they look like something straight out of the Jurassic period, the species are native to Papua New Guinea and a small slither of Queensland in northern Australia. They are primarily vegetarians, mainly living off a diet of fruit, but they're also known to eat fungi, snails, insects, frogs, birds, fish, and scavenged meat.

Definitely not a dinosaur. Instead, it's a cassowary foot. EpochCatcher/Shutterstock

Although the creatures only tend to attack when they feel threatened, they are still certainly not to be messed with. They attack by charging at a fast speed and kicking with their extremely strong legs that are tipped with a long claw on each foot, which can grow as long as 10 centimeters (4 inches).

A study from 1999 documented over 150 attacks on humans by cassowaries in Queensland. Most victims were charged or kicked, although some were pecked, jumped on, and head-butted. In almost 75 percent of the incidents, the cassowaries “appeared to be expecting or soliciting food from humans.”

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The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission classes cassowaries as Class II wildlife, meaning they are considered dangerous but you can privately own them if you have a license, the right type of enclosure, and “substantial experience”.

While deaths from a cassowary attack are extremely rare, it's not totally unheard of. Smithsonian Magazine previously reported that the last person known to have been killed by a cassowary was an Australian teen back in 1926. Phillip McLean, 16, was reportedly running from a wild cassowary at a ranch in Queensland when he fell over and received a slash to his neck by the bird’s clawed foot. He died of his injuries shortly after.


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