PeterNBiddle
Contributor
Interesting perspective on the topic, but the number of deaths alone don't give the whole picture. You would need to also assess the hours of exposure to a risk and determine a probability of something happening taking this into consideration. Another way to consider the risk would be the following mind game.
Oh good lord do you think you are the only one with predators in your neck of the woods? Imagine you live in North America.
The average attack rate in North America for Mountain Lions is 6/year with one fatality. My personal exposure risk to Mountain Lion attack has frequently been for 24 hours/day when hiking or in the mountains, where I sometimes spend weeks at a time.
Getting hit by a mountain lion has been described as being like being hit full speed with a baseball bat studded with sharpened spikes and as land-based ambush predators you will frequently have zero warning of an attack - they don't circle, they don't sniff, there is no checking you out. They don't show you their fins. They stalk you (completely silently) and hit you from behind and unlike with sharks, cats do seem to view humans as a viable prey species. I know hunters (surprise!) who have looked behind them to see a mountain lion stalking them a few yards away - and they could have been stalking those hunters for minutes or even hours.
http://tchester.org/sgm/lists/lion_attacks.html#stats
We average a couple of bear attacks a year, although that number has gone up considerably in the past year or two.
http://abcnews.go.com/US/bear-attac...ww.bing.com/search?q=bear+attacks&form=APIPA1
There are more moose attacks in North America than bears or cats. Moose will seriously mess you up and reportedly kill 2 people a year in the US. They can weigh up to 1500 pounds and are deeply stupid.
http://www.glacier-national-park-travel-guide.com/moose-attack.html
I am far more concerned with Mountain Lion attacks than I am with sharks. Im more afraid of bears than mountain lions. I'm more afraid of dog attacks than I am of bears. And I'm more afraid of people attacks than I am of dogs.
However I still hike in the woods, live in the inner city, talk to dogs, and ride public transit... I take precautions but I don't ask for the world to change to fit my fears and I would vigorously oppose any plan to cull a predator species based purely on threats to humans.
It's our job to protect them, not the other way around.
I think you have forgotten what it means to be around anything scarier than yourself. I suggest you work to address your fears rather than change your entire ecosystem to accommodate them.