. Does seem unwise to allow a staff person to go in alone with them.
Let alone paying visitors, which apparently was the practice at this institution.
Why do they persist in believing that these wild animals are in any way desirous of contact of any kind, especially human?
Kolmarden Wildlife Park: Wolves maul woman keeper to death at Sweden's most popular zoo | Mail Online
Right now I am devastated and everything feels unreal.
I believe there are no confirmed cases of a gray wolf of any subspecies killing a human being in the wild. In fact this is the first case even in captivity that I have heard of, although according to the article it did happen once before (over a century ago) in Sweden.
I would agree with Arizona Docent, in that I've always heard that there were NO confirmed cases. I remember hearing that after watching a documentary about a Jack London movie ("Call of the Wild"?). So I just can't blame the Kolmarden people -- they were dealing with something they likely thought would NEVER happen.
By the way, I've also heard that there are no confirmed cases of a human being killed by piranhas. (Then again, if one was killed, there might not be much evidence left behind.)