The bird had attacked Hajos, injuring him severely. He was transported to a hospital, where he later died.

Authorities are investigating the exact circumstances that led to his death.

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A woman who identified herself as Hajos’s fiancee told the Gainesville Sun “he was doing what he loved.”

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The bird has subsequently been secured, authorities said. The sheriff’s office said they may coordinate with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission as the investigation moves forward. The FWC identifies cassowaries as “Class II Wildlife,” which can “pose a danger to people.” The commission requires a permit for the sale, public exhibition or possession of these animals.

Cassowaries, of which there are three species, are native to the tropics of Queensland, Australia, and New Guinea. Like photos would suggest, they are a relative of ostriches, emus and rheas. Cassowaries look like a high-fashion dinosaur; thick black feathers cover their bodies, from which a cobalt blue and vibrant red neck erupts, leading to a head adorned with a keratin “casque” or crest.

What makes them dangerous, however, are their feet. Three toes sport pointed nails. The most dangerous is the inner toe, which ends in a veritable dagger several inches long.

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“If you were kicked by a cassowary with that nail, it would do a lot of damage to you,” said Eric Slovak, assistant curator of birds at the National Zoo in Washington. “You would wind up in the hospital for sure.”

But cassowaries, while dangerous, tend to be reclusive, Slovak said. In the wild, they hide deep in the rain forests but will occasionally encounter humans when they come across a road or neighborhood.

“It’s just kind of a big, 200-pound, six-foot bird roaming around eating fruit all day,” Slovak said, noting their deadly nail was probably developed to help them move through the dense forests.

That doesn’t mean they’re benign. The National Zoo’s cassowaries are on loan while their enclosures are remodeled. Slovak said they took serious precautions when the birds lived at the zoo. Their enclosures were built with doors and gates to separate them from humans who needed to enter.

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“At no time, ever, do we ever go in with the cassowary,” he said. “Not because they’re mean, but because we know how dangerous they could be if they got spooked for any reason.”

“I would not understand why anyone would want to keep a cassowary as a pet,” Slovak added.

There have been a handful of frightful encounters with the birds, mostly in their native Australia, though the last known death happened in 1926, according to Smithsonian Magazine. In a 1999 study, Christopher P. Kofron of the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service tallied 221 cassowary attacks in Queensland, and 150 were on humans.

Kofron noted that the attacks tend to happen “every year” and that the birds most frequently attacked when they were expecting to be fed by a human or when they were defending their food, offspring or themselves.

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In 2012, an Australian tourist named Dennis Ward was kicked off a cliff into a body of water by a cassowary when he and his family were visiting Babinda Boulders in Queensland. “It just came straight up to me, decided to pick on me for some reason, I don’t know what for,” Ward told the Cairns Post.

“Next thing, thump, I copped a boot in the back and I was tumbling down the bank,” Ward said. “It was pretty high, about seven foot. I hit this ledge near the bottom and bounced off into the drink.”

In another unnerving incident, Doon McColl and her boyfriend, Ray Willetts, had back-to-back run-ins with cassowaries in Australia’s Mount Whitfield Conservation Park in 1995. McColl was jogging when she heard something behind her.

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“I turned and saw this huge black beast,” she told Outside Magazine. The cassowary cornered her in a tree for hours, she said, before it finally let her be. A week later, Willetts was also pursued through the forest by one of the creatures.

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“He came home crosshatched and bleeding,” McColl said. He told her, “ ‘Oh my god, Doon, it was Jurassic Park!’ "