Rabu, 14 Oktober 2009

World-famous "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin, known for seeking out and handling some of the most dangerous animals in existence, died on September 4, 2006, in a shocking accident with a stingray. Six weeks later, a stingray jumped into a fishing boat in Florida and stabbed 81-year-old James Bertakis in the chest.

Stingrays are considered by most experts to be docile creatures, only attacking in self-defense. Most stingray-related injuries to humans occur to the ankles and lower legs, when someone accidentally steps on a ray buried in the sand and the frightened fish flips up its dangerous tail. Officials are calling the Florida incident a totally freak occurrence. In the early stages of examining the Steve Irwin accident, some experts have hypothesized that the combined positions of Irwin (above the fish) and his cameraman (in front of the fish) could have made the stingray feel trapped and triggered a defensive attack; others point out that completely unprovoked stingray attacks are not unheard of.
The Blue-Spotted Stingray
Casey and Astrid Witte Mahaney/Getty Images
The Blue-Spotted Stingray (Taeniura lymma), Red Sea., Egypt, Africa. See more saltwater fish pictures.

Stingray-related fatalities (in humans) are extremely rare, partly because a stingray's venom, while extraordinarily painful, isn't usually deadly -- unless the initial strike is to the chest or abdominal area. In Irwin's case, the barb actually pierced his heart. James Bertakis was also stabbed in the chest, and possibly in the heart, but he did not attempt to remove it, which could prove to be part of the reason he survived the attack.

News agencies have reported that Irwin's encounter was with an Australian bull ray, estimated to weigh about 220 pounds (100 kg). Irwin was snorkeling in about 6 feet (2 meters) of water, filming a new documentary titled "Ocean's Deadliest" off the coast of Australia. Irwin was swimming with one of the larger species of rays out there -- Australian bull rays can be up to 4 feet (1.2 meters) wide and 8 feet (2.4 meters) long -- but all stingrays use the same attack mechanism regardless of size. The mechanism is called a sting, up to 8 inches (20 cm) long in a bull ray, located near the base of the tail. The sting contains a sharp spine with serrated edges, or barbs, that face the body of the fish. There is a venom gland at the base of the spine and a membrane-like sheath that covers the entire sting mechanism.


Photo courtesy NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service
Australian bull ray, a.k.a. southern eagle ray, Myliobatis australis

When a stingray attacks, it needs to be facing its victim, because all it does is flip its long tail upward over its body so it strikes whatever is in front of it. The ray doesn't have direct control over the sting mechanism, only over the tail. In most cases, when the sting enters a person's body, the pressure causes the protective sheath to tear. When the sheath tears, the sharp, serrated edges of the spine sink in and venom flows into the wound.

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