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Warning as 'dangerous' creature spotted in Aussie backyard

Warning as 'dangerous' creature spotted in Aussie backyard

Yahoo18-06-2025

A home security camera has captured the 'dangerous' moment a woman and her child were chased into their home by a large cassowary in Australia. The footage has prompted Queensland's environment department (DETSI) to issue a warning not to feed them, as the prospect of an easy meal is luring birds from forests into neighbouring suburbs.
Filmed at Mission Beach in the state's tropical north, the clip shows a male bird and his chick continuing to wait outside the door because they've learned to associate humans with food. Local vet Dr Graham Lauridsen has seen an increase in people who visit the holiday town intentionally using scraps to lure the birds into the frame of their camera.
'They're getting fed more than ever before. And people are feeding them so they can get themselves a photo with a cassowary and stick it on social media,' he told Yahoo News.
'It doesn't seem to matter how many times we tell people. I think we need to start fining people for doing it, especially if they're repeat offenders.'
Related: 😳 Entire Aussie street living in fear of 55-kilo wild bird's 'bold behaviour'
In the security footage, there's one particular detail that's concerning experts — the presence of the chick.
'Cassowaries can injure you if they're stirred up enough. That can be if they're pushing them away because you don't want them to be near you, or if they've got chicks around,' Lauridsen said.
'They will bring their chicks to where the food supply is when they're caring for them. And if you get between them and the chick, they'll do you harm.'
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DETSI said the incident, which occurred in May, is one of several linked to the illegal feeding of cassowaries. In April, a man in his seventies was hospitalised after being kicked in the leg at another location.
Ranger Jeff Lewis said DETSI has installed signage and worked to educate people in the area, but the problem persists, and this is highlighted by the video. 'Thankfully the mother and child were able to get inside to safety, but it's an important reminder to not interfere with wildlife,' he said.
Lauridsen has become an 'unfortunate' cassowary expert at his Tropical Vets practice because of the high number of incidents involving injured cassowaries.
While he estimates at least one person is injured by a cassowary every year, the act of feeding them is having an even bigger impact on the birds themselves, with the Australian species now listed as endangered. Lauridsen has treated close to 400 birds in the 25 years he's been working with DETSI.
'Almost all cassowaries that have been hit by cars or attacked by dogs in Mission Beach, when we've done post-mortems on them, they have domestic fruits inside them,' Lauridsen said. 'We say in the field that a fed bird is a dead bird.'
Unfortunately for people who live in the holiday town, cassowaries don't only harass those who regularly feed them. It can result in someone who does the right thing being attacked.
Lauridsen explained cassowaries 'don't necessarily distinguish one person from another', so an unsuspecting resident could be attacked because they've been fed by a neighbour, a person up the street, tourists, or kids waiting for the bus.
'They literally believe humans will provide them with food whenever they're around, and unfortunately, when they don't, they're scary and potentially dangerous,' he said.
Cassowaries have three claws on each foot, but it's the inner toe that's the most deadly because it has a 10 to 15-centimetre 'dagger' that can be used to kill. Fatalities are rare, and they usually occur when the birds are in captivity, with the last known death occurring in Florida in 2019.
Cassowaries are thought to have evolved 60 million years ago — six million years after the last of the non-avian dinosaurs became extinct.
Over that time they've become an essential part of Queensland's rainforests, eating native plants and distributing their seeds. When the birds are fed a diet of commercial fruits, they are no longer fulfilling their natural role in the environment, and the landscape as we know it could begin to change.
Anyone who wishes to report a cassowary displaying worrying behaviour is urged to contact rangers on 1300 130 372.
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