Wolf attack
A wolf attack refers to an aggressive encounter between gray wolves (Canis lupus) and humans, typically involving bites or pursuits that result in injury or, less commonly, death, with documented cases worldwide numbering in the hundreds over recent decades but remaining exceedingly rare relative to human-wolf coexistence.[1][2] Empirical analyses classify such attacks into three primary categories: rabid wolves, which account for the majority of historical and some modern incidents due to altered behavior from neurological disease; predatory attacks, where wolves treat humans as prey, often involving habituated or food-conditioned animals in regions of prey scarcity; and defensive or provoked responses, such as when wolves protect pups or are cornered.[3][1] From 2002 to 2020, a global review identified 489 verifiable human victims of wolf attacks, including 380 from rabid wolves (14 fatal), 67 predatory (9 fatal), and 42 defensive/provoked (3 fatal), underscoring that non-rabid threats, while infrequent, occur predominantly in Eurasia and involve vulnerable individuals like children or isolated adults.[1][4] In North America, attacks are even scarcer, with fewer than 100 recorded since the 18th century, mostly non-fatal and linked to captive or habituated wolves rather than wild populations.[5] Notable clusters include historical epidemics in Europe and Asia tied to rabies outbreaks, and contemporary concerns in expanding wolf ranges like India and Turkey, where prey depletion and human encroachment exacerbate risks, prompting debates over management strategies like culling to prevent habituation.[6][3] Despite public apprehensions amplified by folklore, causal factors such as disease, food conditioning, and territorial defense explain occurrences without evidence of inherent human-directed malice in healthy wild wolves.[2]