A teenagerâs death on an untamed island has put the spotlight on its inhabitants
- - A teenagerâs death on an untamed island has put the spotlight on its inhabitants
Hilary Whiteman, CNNJanuary 25, 2026 at 6:22 AM
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Aerial view of K'gari, previously known as Fraser Island - Airphoto Australia/Photodisc/Getty Images
The sun was still low on the horizon when 19-year-old Piper James walked toward the Pacific Ocean for a morning swim on an island whose name in the local language means âparadise.â
Within two hours, she was found dead, her body surrounded by dingoes, wild Australian native dogs that roam freely on Kâgari, a national park famous for its natural beauty off the countryâs eastern coast.
Itâs not yet clear what caused the death of the Canadian backpacker, a young woman with an adventurous spirit, who had been working on the World Heritage-listed island for several weeks, fulfilling a long-held dream of visiting Australia.
Preliminary autopsy results found evidence of drowning, but also dingo bites inflicted before and after she died. âPre-mortem dingo bite marks are not likely to have caused immediate death,â the Queensland Coronerâs Court said in a statement.
âOf course, we all want to believe it was drowning,â said her grieving father, Todd James. âItâs horrific, but maybe a little more peaceful than the alternative.â
Pathology tests to determine the cause of Piperâs death could take several weeks, but if dingoes are found to have played a significant role, it would be only the third fatal dingo attack in Australia in nearly 50 years â and the first involving an adult.
Piper James, 19, was found dead on 75 Mile Beach on K'gari on Monday. - Todd James
In 1980, a dingo infamously snatched baby Azaria Chamberlain from her parentsâ tent in the Northern Territory. At that time, no one believed a dingo would take an infant and, despite her claims of innocence, the babyâs mother Lindy Chamberlain was jailed for murder. She was exonerated years later, when new evidence supported her story, inspiring a courtroom drama starring Meryl Streep.
The second fatality occurred in 2001, when 9-year-old Clinton Gage was mauled on Kâgari, then called Fraser Island, by two dingoes who also attacked his younger brother.
âThatâs when we started to see the fences being put up around the townships and the resorts,â said George Seymour, mayor of the Fraser Coast region that includes Kâgari.
In the days afterward, more than 30 dingoes on the island were âhumanely destroyed,â a decision that prompted public outcry.
A possible third fatality put some in the community on edge. Not because of any change in the perceived risk â which they know well â but because they feared it could drive calls for another cull.
On Sunday, the state government announced that the dingoes âinvolved in the incidentâ would be removed and âhumanely euthanised,â without specifying how many would be killed.
Rangers had observed aggressive behavior from the pack this week and they posed an âunacceptable public safety risk,â the statement added.
James said his daughter would not have supported a cull. âPiper would not want that ⊠and would be devastated to be any part of that,â he said.
Visitors to Kâgari are warned of the risks, but James says young foreign nationals like his daughter, who work on the island, need firmer guardrails. Piper had told her parents that dingoes looked âcute.â
âThey look like her dog from home,â said James.
âThose dogs, I said, âYou donât touch them. You canât touch them.â And sheâs like âI know.ââ
Do not go into the water
Around half a million people visit Kâgari every year for its white-sand beaches, sparkling blue lakes and native wildlife â including dingoes, or wongari, as theyâre known in the local Aboriginal language.
Up to 200 dingoes roam the island, and while they look similar to their relatives on the mainland, their isolation from domestic and feral dogs means they have some of the purest dingo DNA. To Australia, their conservation is considered an issue of ânational significance.â
While dingoes are treasured, theyâre also acknowledged as dangerous.
Visitors to K'gari are warned to keep their distance from dingoes. - DETSI
Dingoes see camp sites as an easy source of food. - DETSI
Visitors to Kâgari are warned to stay at least 20 meters from the animals, travel in groups, and keep children within armâs reach. âDingo sticksâ are provided to ward off those that get too close.
âDingoes see people as a source of food, and thatâs the issue, not people themselves,â said Ben Allen, a wildlife biologist who works for Ecosure, an environmental consultancy that did the last major review of dingoes on Kâgari in 2012, though smaller ones have followed.
âOver here, they sort of jokingly call it seagull syndrome, where you give a seagull a chip and then it wants the whole hamburger,â said Allen. âWell, these seagulls have got four feet and teeth, so you donât really want to be feeding them a chip, because when it comes to ask for the whole hamburger, you can have problems.â
Tourists are urged to lock up their food and trash, and anglers instructed to bury any bait that may attract scavengers. Hefty fines are issued for anyone who feeds them or is seen to be encouraging their presence. Information guides warn visitors not to run, as dingoes will give chase.
âIn the past, weâve told people that if youâre on the beach and youâre being stalked, you should go into the water,â said Seymour, the local mayor.
However, that advice changed after recent attacks â including two in 2023, when a 10-year-old boy was dragged underwater by a dingo before his sister stepped in, and when a woman was attacked despite running into the surf to escape four dingoes. She was pulled from the water by two men and treated for serious injuries to her legs and arms.
âIâve been saying for a couple of years that there is a risk of a fatality,â said Seymour.
An early-morning swim
On the morning of her death, Piper James had gone for a swim alone on the beach near the rusty hull of the Maheno shipwreck, a local landmark that washed ashore in a cyclone almost 100 years ago. No one knows what happened next.
âWe donât know if she actually went in the water,â said her father, Todd. âIf she did go in, thereâs a good chance she drowned. She was a strong swimmer ⊠But good swimmers get taken away all the time.â
The SS Maheno is the most famous shipwreck on Kâgari Island and has become a landmark on 75 Mile Beach, very popular with tourists visiting the Island. - Deano968/iStockphoto/Getty Images
Swimming is not advised on the islandâs unpatrolled beaches and strong ocean currents are considered hazardous, especially along the eastern coast. Strong winds on Monday whipped up eight-foot (2.5-meter) waves, according to one resident, who lives nearby.
Itâs possible James got into trouble in the surf before dingoes entered the picture.
James knows his daughter didnât take a dingo stick with her â because she didnât think sheâd need it.
âPiper should not have gone. She made that decision to go. I just wish sheâd maybe taken a stick, or not have gone at all. She shouldnât have gone alone, thatâs the bottom line.â
James said Piper loved Byron Bay and Bondi Beach â other popular Australian destinations for beach-loving tourists â but Kâgari was a ânext-level kind of experience.â
Scott Bell, the secretary of the Happy Valley Community Association on Kâgari, has been visiting the island on and off since the 1960s, and understands its appeal.
âItâs a magical sort of place,â he said. âIt is a wilderness area. And in that environment, there are a lot of dangers, be they sharks, snakes, spiders or dingoes.â
Hundreds of thousands of visitors go to K'gari each year to swim in the clear waters of Lake McKenzie and immerse themselves in nature. - Nigel Marsh/iStock Editorial/Getty Images
The Maheno shipwreck has drawn tourists to 75 Mile Beach for close to 100 years. - stanciuc/iStock Editorial/Getty Images
Bell said his time on the island has taught him to stand up to dingoes. âYou stand tall, they see a large animal there, and they tend to run away,â said Bell. Children are particularly vulnerable due to their smaller size and natural reaction when scared.
âKids tend to run⊠Thatâs probably the worst thing you can do. Turn your back on a predator running, be it a lion, tiger, bear, you know youâre in trouble,â he said.
Bell said that, until the cause of Jamesâ death is confirmed, itâs too early to decide what should be done. He said rangers are working hard to manage the risks â but for as long as humans and dingoes share the island, that risk will never truly go away.
The landâs traditional custodians, the Butchulla people, have a culturally significant bond with the islandâs dingoes, stretching back thousands of years. They have long called for caps on visitor numbers, especially during the dingoesâ breeding season from March to May, to lower the risk.
âEveryone should enjoy Kâgari, but they need to come when it is not the breeding season,â Christine Royan, director of the Butchulla Aboriginal Corporation, told local media.
âThe solution is not to blame or punish the animal,â she added. âWeâre going to fight anybody that wants to remove the wongari from KâGari.â
Signs warn visitors to keep their distance from dingoes seen to be aggressive in the area. - karenfoleyphotography/iStock Editorial/Getty Images
Queenslandâs state premier has ruled out a cap on visitor numbers. Sundayâs statement said the island remains open: âWe are supporting our tourism operators as they continue to showcase the Fraser Coast as an incredible place to visit.â
Seymour, the mayor, has called for children to be banned from camping outside fenced areas.
âIf the government has to tell you to keep your children within armâs length â that is not why people go camping. People go camping to feel free to be there within nature. I just donât think itâs suitable for children to be camping in the unfenced areas,â he said.
Piperâs father agrees that children are at risk â especially those who camp outside fenced areas.
âYou cannot leave people exposed and children exposed and let parents think that itâs not going to happen to them, because we thought it wouldnât happen to Piper.â
K'gari has a permanent population of fewer than 200 people. - Deano968/iStockphoto/Getty Images
Visitors also come to see K'gari's rainforests, that are home to a variety of native animals. - Deano968/iStockphoto/Getty ImagesInherent risks of nature
Over the years, individual dingoes deemed too habituated to humans have been euthanized, in consultation with the Butchulla people. Itâs not a measure taken lightly and only occurs after specific dingoes pose a repeated threat to visitorsâ safety.
Allen, from Ecosure, says annual turnover in dingo populations is quite high â about two thirds of the islandâs dingoes die naturally each year. âNot every pup can survive when youâre stuck on an island,â he said.
The population typically peaks between December and February, when pups are learning to become independent. âItâs not uncommon for this time of year to see the larger group sizes, which coincides with summer when everybody in Australia is at the beach,â he said.
In some ways, Australiaâs challenge with dingoes is not dissimilar to issues elsewhere, for example Japanâs attempts to hold bears at bay, or Indiaâs problem with lions.
However, the dingo population is not growing â itâs people who are becoming more common, bringing carloads of food for family trips, and driving up and down the beach where dingoes would typically hunt.
Barriers have been erected to keep dingoes out of formal campsites. - Matthew Starling/iStockphoto/Getty Images
To some, they may look like small domestic dogs, but theyâre unpredictable and wild. And just as tourists are urged to stay away from large predators in other nations, they need to keep their distance from dingoes, no matter how harmless they may seem.
âIf I travel to Kruger National Park in South Africa and wanted to go for a walk, I can accept a certain level of risk. I might get eaten by a lion or stomped on by an elephant,â said Allen.
âIf I do the same in Chitwan in Nepal, which is a beautiful national park, Iâve got to put up with tigers and leopards and elephants there, too.
âWe donât have lions and tigers and bears, but weâve got dingoes and kangaroos and lots of venomous snakes and all that kind of thing. Thereâs just inherent risks with being out in nature.â
The James family plans to travel to Kâgari in the coming weeks to attend a smoking ceremony as guests of the islandâs traditional custodians. The ancient ritual will see smoke from smoldering native leaves waft over the islandâs sandy beaches â to cleanse, and to heal.
James wants his daughterâs death to force a change in rules and culture, so there are more guardrails around children and young travelers, like Piper, who are strong and independent but donât necessarily have the life experience to fully appreciate the dangers.
âMaybe more education with Piper would help, because when youâre put on the tour, youâre educated, and then youâre protected, and then you feel safe,â he said. âThen youâre left alone and things are a little different than the tour.â
This story has been with additional information.
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