Elephants are attacking and even eating villagers in the Sundarban Islands of West Bengal, India.
A documentary episode titled “World's Deadliest Towns: Man-Eating Elephant,” broadcast by Animal Planet in the U.S. Feb. 21, showed the at once terrifying and miserable story of an elephant which ate 17 people before being put to death.
The farming village is at times visited by the nocturnal elephants that are looking for food, revealed the broadcast. Although elephants are held sacred enough for there to be an elephant god, Ganesh, in Hinduism, there is no denying the animals’ destructive capacity is hurting the village.
After much deliberation, the villagers used hunting guns to chase away the elephants. During this process, one mother elephant was killed, only for examination to reveal that she had eaten 17 people. The not-yet fully digested contents of her stomach yielded the DNA of 17 different people.
Zoologist Dave Salmoni attributes the elephants’ horrific change in diet to abnormal weather and the destruction of their habitat.
Some of the villagers claim that the elephant became a man-eating one only after seeing her calves being killed by humans.
An elephant’s IQ usually ranges from 50 to 70, comparable to that of a 3-year-old child. However, one must bear in mind that IQ is a measure designed for humans, and it is known that elephants have astounding maternal instincts, and in one case a female elephant remembered the face of her calf’s killer for 10 years before attacking him specifically.
The documentary also noted that last year a Bengal tiger ate 14 people in an Indian village, and challenged viewers to consider whether it was not humans’ selfish destruction of animals’ natural habitat that was turning the animals into dangerous creatures.
Humans aren't natural prey for elephants and tigers, but in the Sundarban islands of West Bengal, India, an alarming number of people have been attacked -- even eaten -- by these wild beasts.
In one part of the country, there have been reports of elephants going on a rampage, trampling homes and killing around 200 people in the past year. In one bizarre case, this typically plant-eating animal reportedly ate a human.
In another part of the country, tigers, who have developed an appetite for human flesh, reportedly killed 14 people in one village alone last year.
"Tigers generally aren't man eaters," said Dave Salmoni. "It's anomaly when an animal decides to start eating people."
Salmoni is a zoologist and an animal trainer who specializes in predators. The host of several Animal Planet shows, Salmoni will also appear on the upcoming Animal Planet special, "World's Deadliest Towns," on Feb. 21.