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Steve Irwin, and his wife Terri with a
giant Galapagos land tortoise at the Australia Zoo.
CAIRNS, Australia - Steve Irwin, the hugely
popular Australian television personality and conservationist known
as the “Crocodile Hunter,” was killed Monday by a stingray while
filming off the Great Barrier Reef. He was 44.
Irwin was at Batt Reef, off the remote coast
of northeastern Queensland state, shooting a segment for a series
called “Ocean’s Deadliest” when he swam too close to one of the
animals, which have a poisonous bard on their tails, his friend and
colleague John Stainton said.
“He came on top of the stingray and the stingray’s barb went up and
into his chest and put a hole into his heart,” said Stainton, who
was on board Irwin’s boat at the time.
Crew members aboard the boat, Croc One, called emergency services in
the nearest city, Cairns, and administered CPR as they rushed the
boat to nearby Low Isle to meet a rescue helicopter. Medical staff
pronounced Irwin dead when they arrived a short time later, Stainton
said.
Irwin was famous for his enthusiasm for wildlife and his catchword “Crikey!”
in his television program “Crocodile Hunter.” First broadcast in
Australia in 1992, the program was picked up by the Discovery
network, catapulting Irwin to international celebrity.
He rode his image into a feature film, 2002’s “The Crocodile
Hunters: Collision Course” and developed the wildlife park that his
parents opened, Australia Zoo, into a major tourist attraction.
“The world has lost a great wildlife icon, a passionate
conservationist and one of the proudest dads on the planet,”
Stainton told reporters in Cairns. “He died doing what he loved best
and left this world in a happy and peaceful state of mind. He would
have said, ’Crocs Rule!”’
'A huge loss to Australia'
Prime Minister John Howard, who hand-picked Irwin to attend a gala
barbecue to honor President Bush when he visited in 2003, said he
was “shocked and distressed at Steve Irwin’s sudden, untimely and
freakish death.”
“It’s a huge loss to Australia,” Howard told reporters. “He was a
wonderful character. He was a passionate environmentalist. He
brought joy and entertainment and excitement to millions of people.”
Irwin, who made a trademark of hovering dangerously close to
untethered crocodiles and leaping on their backs, spoke in
rapid-fire bursts with a thick Australian accent and was almost
never seen without his uniform of khaki shorts and shirt and heavy
boots.
His ebullience was infectious and Australian officials sought him
out for photo opportunities and to promote Australia
internationally.
Irwin’s public image was dented, however, in 2004 when he caused an
uproar by holding his infant son in one arm while feeding large
crocodiles inside a zoo pen. Irwin claimed at the time there was no
danger to the child, and authorities declined to charge Irwin with
violating safety regulations.
Later that year, he was accused of getting too close to penguins, a
seal and humpback whales in Antarctica while making a documentary.
Irwin denied any wrongdoing, and an Australian Environment
Department investigation recommended no action be taken against him.
Stingrays have a serrated, toxin-loaded barb, or spine, on the top
of their tail. The barb, which can be up to 10 inches long, flexes
if a ray is frightened. Stings usually occur to people when they
step on or swim too close to a ray and can be excruciatingly painful
but are rarely fatal, said University of Queensland marine
neuroscientist Shaun Collin.
'Extraordinarily bad luck'
Collin said he suspected Irwin died because the barb pierced under
his ribcage and directly into his heart.
“It was extraordinarily bad luck. It’s not easy to get spined by a
stingray and to be killed by one is very rare,” Collin said.
News of Irwin’s death spread quickly, and tributes flowed from all
quarters of society.
At Australia Zoo at Beerwah, south Queensland, floral tributes were
dropped at the entrance, where a huge fake crocodile gapes. Drivers
honked their horns as they passed.
“Steve, from all God’s creatures, thank you. Rest in peace,” was
written on a card with a bouquet of native flowers.
“We’re all very shocked. I don’t know what the zoo will do without
him. He’s done so much for us, the environment and it’s a big loss,”
said Paula Kelly, a local resident and volunteer at the zoo, after
dropping off a wreath at the gate.
Stainton said Irwin’s American-born wife Terri, from Eugene, Ore.,
had been informed of his death, and had told their daughter Bindi
Sue, 8, and son Bob, who will turn 3 in December.
The couple met when she went on vacation in Australia in 1991 and
visited Irwin’s Australia Zoo; they were married six months later.
Sometimes referred to as the “Crocodile Huntress,” she costarred on
her husband’s television show and in his 2002 movie. |
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In this undated handout
photo released by the Australia Zoo, crocodile hunter Steve
Irwin, right, and his wife Terri with Harriet, a Giant Galapagos
Land Tortoise, at Australia Zoo, about 70 km (44 miles) north of
Brisbane. Harriet, who died on Friday, June 23, 2006 at the age
of 176 years is said to be the oldest animal in captivity
,according to the Guinness book of Records. |