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Hunt for lake turtle that severed swimming boy's Achilles tendon in Bavaria's Irsee lake

Alligator snapping turtle is believed to be exotic pet released into wild in Bavaria

Tony Paterson
Thursday 15 August 2013 12:14 EDT
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An alligator snapping turtle 'eats almost anything it can catch'
An alligator snapping turtle 'eats almost anything it can catch' (EPA)

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The mayor of a Bavarian village has offered a reward of €1,000 for the capture of a mystery alligator snapping turtle which is believed to have bitten and severely injured an eight-year-old boy while he was swimming in a south German lake.

Doctors said the boy emerged from Bavaria's Irsee lake with his Achilles tendon severed and had assumed he had stepped on broken glass. They later concluded that he had been bitten by a unknown predator

Munich Zoological Institute, which examined photographs of the bite said boy's wounds had most likely been inflicted by an alligator snapping turtle - a species common in the United States which "eats almost anything it can catch."

The turtle, which is not indigenous to Germany, is believed to be an exotic pet released into the wild. It's eight year-old victim has appealed to the authorities not to hurt the turtle should it be found: " It should be taken to a zoo," he insisted.

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