A woman has been bitten on the hands by a dingo near a camping area on K’gari on Thursday morning.
The woman had left the Winnam camping area alone and was walking towards the ocean about 10.30am when she was approached by five dingoes.
Visitors to K’gari are reminded to never approach or feed dingoes, avoid walking alone and keep children close at all times. Food and waste should also be secured at all times.Credit: Kaihla McConnell
A tagged dingo lunged at the woman. She suffered two lacerations to the middle fingers on both hands.
The Queensland Ambulance Service treated the woman on the island, formerly Fraser Island, and advised her to see a doctor.
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Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service rangers had previously provided dingo-safe education to people at the camping area, on the eastern side of the island along 75 Mile Beach, and were investigating the incident.
It was believed the pack of dingoes had been spending time around the camping area after gaining access to a large amount of unsecured food from a different campsite earlier this week.
The Department of Environment and Tourism warned that dingoes only needed to be fed or find scraps once to form a food association with people or an area.
The incident brought the total number of negative interactions and high-risk incidents between humans and dingoes on K’gari in 2025 to 32.
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