Leopard mauls guide in national park

A leopard mauled a guide in an attack on an open tourist safari vehicle in South Africa's flagship wildlife park on Thursday, authorities said.

The attack happened in Kruger National Park as a guide and his passengers watched a leopard about two metres from their vehicle, the park said. The leopard "cunningly disappeared" around the side of the vehicle and then leaped and grabbed the guide's arm, according to a park statement.

Tourists in the vehicle hit the leopard with whatever objects they had, but the leopard only let go of the guide's arm after a tourist in another vehicle drove up and scared it away, the park said.

Park spokesman William Mabasa said the guide was able to drive the vehicle away from the scene, and was treated for wounds on his right arm and released.

Rangers later shot and killed the leopard, which was ill, emaciated and also injured after being hit by the vehicle carrying the guide and tourists, according to Mabasa.

He said tourists who get close to leopards, lions and other potentially dangerous animals
should be vigilant.

"Never take your eyes off the animal because you don't know what the animal is thinking," he said.

Whether in the wild or captivity, big cats remain among the world's most deadly predators, as this zoo keeper in the US found. He was attacked and left fighting for his life by a tiger he had raised from infancy.

Even supposedly safe tourist experiences can prove fatal when people fail to take precautions though. A decision to leave a car window rolled down at another South African wildlife attraction left an American woman dead and her husband with injuries after a lion attacked them in their vehicle earlier this year.

Video shot by tourists at the same part shows just how easily sight seeing can turn dangerous. Again, a rolled down car window offered an opportunity for a lion to take a swipe at a human.