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The parents of 19-year-old Canadian backpacker Piper James travelled to Queensland to visit K’gari (Fraser Island) and take part in a traditional Butchulla smoking ceremony near the SS Maheno wreck after their daughter’s body was found early on 19 January.
A Queensland coroner’s preliminary assessment reported physical evidence consistent with drowning and injuries consistent with dingo bites, but noted pre‑mortem dingo bites were unlikely to have been immediately fatal; full pathology results are pending.
In response to the incident, Queensland rangers identified a pack of about 10 dingoes as an "unacceptable public safety risk" and have humanely euthanised eight, with one outstanding.
Scientists and dingo specialists warn the removal risks pushing K’gari’s isolated dingo population, estimated under 200 individuals, into an "extinction vortex" because of low genetic diversity and inbreeding.
Butchulla traditional owners say they were not consulted and consider the canids sacred (wongari). The episode has reignited debate over visitor management, safety rules, and coexistence policies on the World Heritage island, which receives hundreds of thousands of tourists annually.





















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