An 84-year-old woman was reportedly hospitalized after an alligator attacked her while she was walking her dog in Florida.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) said the woman was walking her dog in a neighborhood in the North Fort Myers area around 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 5, when the incident happened, according to NBC News, WINK News and the Fort Meyers News-Press.
The FWC, Lee County Sheriff’s Office and EMS responded to the scene, and the woman was transported to a local hospital, according to NBC and WINK News. Her condition was unknown as of Friday, per NBC News.
FWC spokesperson Bradley Johnson told NBC News that a 7-foot, 3-inch alligator bit the woman on her right leg, describing her injuries as “significant.” He also said she sustained injuries to her arms and a wrist.
Johnson added that her dog was uninjured in the incident.
After a nuisance alligator trapper found the animal, it was “humanely euthanized” due to public safety, Johnson explained.
The FWC did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment.
Mark Burlingham, who lived in the neighborhood and called 911, told the Fort Meyers News-Press that he had been alerted to the incident by a loud noise: “I was outside, and I heard someone screaming.” When he found her, he thought he saw her bones through the gash.
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In a separate interview with WINK News, Burlingham recalled, “I ran down there … and she was laying on the ground with her dog, and [she] said that the alligator came up to get the dog. She pulled the dog out of the way and the gator got her leg and arm and hand.”
“He was a thick gator,” Burlingham added. “She’s lucky she didn’t lose her life.”
According to the FWC, serious injuries caused by alligators are rare. In its latest report on alligator bites, it noted that there were 11 alligator bites in 2022 and only nine the year prior. There also hasn’t been a death due to an alligator bite since 2019, per the FWC.
The FWC recommends that Florida residents “keep a safe distance away” if they see an alligator, never feed an alligator and keep “pets on a leash and away from the water’s edge” as they “resemble alligators’ natural prey.” FWC also noted that alligators were the most active between “dusk and dawn.”