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Glemmingebro, Skåne, Sweden |
A wolf attacked a Shetland pony named Pippi in a paddock outside Glemmingebro in Skåne, leaving the animal so badly injured that it had to be euthanized. The attack was witnessed by the family, and the county administrative board later installed emergency fencing.
AI Comment from GPT 5:
This post describes a rare but severe incident in Skåne where a wolf entered a paddock at night, brought down a Shetland pony, and stayed over the animal despite human presence; injuries were so grave the pony was later euthanized, and emergency fencing was installed while officials consider whether it could be the same wolf linked to a recent sheep kill and, if confirmed, whether protective hunting might be relevant. Authorities also note that horse attacks by wolves are unusual.
The related posts help place this event within a broader pattern of wolf–domestic animal conflicts across Fennoscandia. Reports from Pasvikdalen in Norway describe increased wolf activity, with dispersing wolves crossing borders and causing heavy reindeer losses and stress to herds, and highlight management challenges such as case-by-case permits and the difficulty of removing problem individuals, with Finnish data indicating many wolves are dispersers from Russian packs Wolf invasion from Russia: Killing reindeer and running across yards. In northern Sweden, community concerns escalated after a wolf-like animal was filmed and a reindeer was found torn nearby, prompting hunters to keep dogs at home during moose season, underscoring how sightings and fresh kills can quickly alter local behavior and risk perception Wolf scare in the village – hunters keep their dogs at home. Direct attacks on dogs, while infrequent, do occur, as shown by the confirmed killing of a hunting dog in Innlandet, Norway, with compensation options but no immediate damage-control action taken in that case Hunting Dog (1.5 years old) Killed by Wolf at Risberget in Åsnes. Finally, Södermanland’s sharp rise in wolf attacks on livestock, including a miniature horse, led officials to expand a culling area, illustrating how repeated incidents can trigger targeted management responses when attacks cluster in time and place Wolf attacks in Södermanland have increased - new cull announced. Together, these accounts illuminate how uncommon events like a pony attack can occur alongside broader regional trends of dispersing wolves interacting with livestock and companion animals, with authorities weighing measures ranging from emergency fencing to potential protective hunts depending on confirmed identity and ongoing risk.