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View Full Version : Stingrays strike again - another death



The Bigfella
03-20-2008, 09:00 PM
How bizzare is this? It didn't get her with its barb, but it knocked her down and killed her.



A STINGRAY leaped onto a boat off the Florida Keys and knocked a woman to the deck, killing her, wildlife investigators said.

"It's a bizarre accident," said Jorge Pino, an officer with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

The US woman and her family were aboard a boat in the Atlantic Ocean, off the city of Marathon in the Florida Keys, he said.

"A large ray jumped out of the water and collided with the victim," Mr Pino said.

The impact threw the woman backward and she hit her head on the vessel, he said.

Investigators initially said one of the animal's venomous barbs had stabbed her, but they later said there was no sign of a puncture.
An autopsy was pending.

"We believe she died as a result of the impact between herself and the spotted eagle ray," said Gabriella Ferraro, a spokeswoman for the wildlife commission.

The 35 kg ray and had a wingspan of 1.5 to 1.8 metres, Ms Ferraro said.
The boat was travelling about 40 km/h when the ray collided with the woman, killing both, she said.

Investigators identified the woman as Judy Kay Zagorski, 57, of Pigeon, Michigan.

Spotted eagle rays are common in warm or tropical waters and are often seen near coral reefs. They can grow to more than 2.5 metres across and have two to six short, venomous barbs near the base of their whip-like tails, according to the Florida Museum of Natural History's website.
The rays often swim near the surface and can leap out of the water, especially when pursued, but are generally shy of humans.

"All rays leap out of the water from time to time but certainly to see one collide with a vessel is extremely unusual," Mr Pino said.

In 2006, a spotted eagle ray leaped onto another boat in Florida waters off the Fort Lauderdale area and pierced the heart of an 81-year-old man with its barb. He survived.

Australia's Crocodile Hunter, Steve Irwin, was killed by another type of stingray while filming underwater on the Great Barrier Reef in 2006.

He died when a stingray's barb pierced his heart.


http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23411112-12377,00.html

Pernicious Atavist
03-20-2008, 09:06 PM
Folks can't imagine how many fishes leap out and into boats. Shame it had to kill her. I caught part of it on the news, and at least they didn't say she was attacked, like they did with the last tow reported accidents. Flying fish are notorious for doing that, as are 'cuda!

paladin
03-20-2008, 09:06 PM
I have hand fed sting rays 60-90 feet underwater...eagle rays...they are not aggressive unless you physically restrain them. Keep your hand open when approaching them, let them come to you to feed, touch them with your open hands, they feel like wet velvet underwater, always use a smooth fluid motion when touching them...but under no circumstances attempt to restrain them....

soba
03-21-2008, 12:32 PM
When I lived in the Turks and Caicos, we used to see eagle rays jumping every morning. It was like clockwork, be at a particular place by 7 am, and you'd see them.

I got butted by one near French Cay, once, while I was teaching an AOW student. The eagle ray had a sharksucker following it, and it came and butted me in the chest about 4 times...felt like a truck backing its trailer hitch into me! Those scoop shaped mouths are stiff! After that, the sharksucker kept trying to attach to my student, until another group of divers came by...

Getting hit by a jumping eagle ray would feel like a baseball bat to the chest, methinks.

TimH
03-21-2008, 01:03 PM
When I lived in the Turks and Caicos, we used to see eagle rays jumping every morning. It was like clockwork, be at a particular place by 7 am, and you'd see them.

I got butted by one near French Cay, once, while I was teaching an AOW student. The eagle ray had a sharksucker following it, and it came and butted me in the chest about 4 times...felt like a truck backing its trailer hitch into me! Those scoop shaped mouths are stiff! After that, the sharksucker kept trying to attach to my student, until another group of divers came by...

Getting hit by a jumping eagle ray would feel like a baseball bat to the chest, methinks.

sounds like a bad day in paradise... :D

Torna
03-21-2008, 01:07 PM
>> The boat was travelling about 40 km/h when the ray collided
>> with the woman, killing both, she said.
That sounds like a strange way to put it. I dunno how fast that ray was moving when it was out of the water, but 'roun here when a deer steps out of the snowbank and into the path of a car doing 40 mph, we don't generally say that the deer hit the car.


Similarly
>> Getting hit by a jumping eagle ray would feel...
might better be re-phrased: Hitting a jumping eagle ray at 40 kts would feel....

just my slightly different read of the actions and reactions.
-leif

Hwyl
03-21-2008, 05:39 PM
Crikey

Rigadog
03-22-2008, 08:04 AM
Should these strikes be considered Terrorism? Are we at Orange now?

soba
03-22-2008, 11:32 AM
Dude, it was an eagle ray. It's a patriot.