A stock image of a cougar.Photo:Getty

Cougar

Getty

According to astatementfrom the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), officers received a report of a “human-cougar incident with documented injuries” in King County on Saturday afternoon.

The WDFW said the woman was hospitalized to be treated for her injuries and she is in a “stable condition.”

“I hope that she will recover. She will be fine. I am hearing that it is not life-threatening,” Sgt. Carlo Pace of the Fish and Wildlife Police told the outlet.

A mountain bike trail.Getty

Rear view of woman descending down trail on mountain bike

Sgt. Pace said the other cyclists were able to pin the cougar down with a mountain bike until officers arrived. The cougar was then shot and killed, according to the sergeant.

“If it wasn’t for the response of her friends, it could’ve been much worse because these animals are lethal,” he added.

According to a statement from the King County Sheriff’s Office, perCNN, the attack occurred along Tokul Creek. “One biker (reportedly a 60-year-old female) received either claw or bite injuries from one of the cats during this incident,” the statement read in part.

“Fish and Wildlife officers removed one subadult cougar on arrival at the scene,” the statement from the WDFW continued.

A houndsman was also sent to find a possible second cougar involved in the incident per the statement, but the WDFW said they did not find a second cougar near the scene.

As of 2022, the WDFW estimates there are approximately 3,600 cougars in Washington state, according to theirwebsite.

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A WDFW spokesperson told PEOPLE that cougar attacks on humans are “extremely rare.” “In Washington state, there have been two fatal cougar attacks and approximately 20 other recorded encounters that resulted in human injury in the last 100 years,” said Becky Elder of the Washington State Fish and Wildlife Police.

However, the agency said if someone does find themselves face-to-face with a cougar they shouldn’t run away as it “may trigger an attack.”

Other advice includes trying to appear larger than the cougar and talking to it firmly while “slowly backing away,” as well as fighting back if you are being attacked.

source: people.com