The elk, which had been spotted several times in the area during the
weekend, had been grazing nearby when he was startled by a group of
onlookers and police and fled.
“This was a sign of panic,” said a spokesman for forest management
company Sachsenforst. “He didn't know where to go any more.”
After five hours in the office block the animal was anesthetized, loaded
into a container and taken away on Monday afternoon.
He was released in eastern Saxony. Trapped between the glass panes of the building and an interior wall, the unusual sight had drawn crowds to the building, although the grounds around it were blocked off by police. Others watched from the upper floors of the office block. Young elks occasionally wander from Poland along old animal tracks towards Dresden, with the last one being spotted several years ago.
They are driven to leave their homes when the older generation have new
children and reorganize their family groups.
Sightings have increased across Germany since the fall of the Iron
Curtain, particularly in Brandenburg, Saxony and Bavaria.
Experts believe that more than ten elk live permanently in Germany and
hope that the species will re-establish itself in the country's forests.
He was released in eastern Saxony. Trapped between the glass panes of the building and an interior wall, the unusual sight had drawn crowds to the building, although the grounds around it were blocked off by police. Others watched from the upper floors of the office block. Young elks occasionally wander from Poland along old animal tracks towards Dresden, with the last one being spotted several years ago.
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