Animals and the Pending Zombie Attack

Most sources label the zombie creating agent as a virus specific to humans, and many also agree that the zombies don’t give a damn about most animals. Can we use this? And what if it isn’t true?
Scenario 1: Broad-range virus.
Like the Bird Flu that set the world in a near panic some years ago, the Zed-Vir can infect more species. But would they all attack humans?
Now, humans are social, living creatures, in other words they run a program along the lines of: “Meet people, eat“. In becoming a zombie, some of the details are lost, most notably the word “meet“. Human zeds therefore attack humans. This article is not about the “normal” zeds though.
Dog zeds likely would attack humans too, on account of the two races being pretty close. Dogs, being mammals living in close proximity to humans, would likely be one of the species most heavily exposed, beyond humans themselves of course. Even if the zeds don’t attack dogs directly, some dog owner somewhere will give Fido a big sloppy goodbye-kiss before croaking. If susceptible, Fido now becomes Cujo. Where most depictions of zombies depict the human zombies as being very dull in terms of plain old hide and seek, dogs have much of their brain hardwired into their nasal nerves, they will probably find you. Time to climb a tree.
Advanced simians such as chimpanzees and gorillas are close to us in genetics, and have a fairly large amount of brain capacity to take from. Presumably most of the population of earth aren’t too close to large populations of these, but is your stronghold safe from climbers of a non-human nature? It just takes one. In terms of target recognition, the simian species are able to recognize humans as being somewhat akin to them, gorilla males often make a lot of noise when female zookeepers touch/interact with male zookeepers in their vicinity. And if it’s a zombie-gorilla getting aggressive in your base, you might not be well protected by simple anti-human barricades.
As for birds, gulls will attack anything if they get sufficiently riled up. Zombie-gulls? Meet Hitchcock. Most birds don’t interact much with humans, but should they choose to attack, they can force you to do a lot of extra work stuffing pillows in the ventilation ducts. Your base has armored glass at the ground level? Too bad you didn’t have the thousand dollars extra to install safety glass on the second floor while you were at it. One good thing: Birds don’t salivate a lot, even if you are bitten, it might not be the right time to put on your Al-Queda vintage vest and go hug a zed.
Reptiles and snakes are by nature somewhat ignorant of humans. They might bite, and it might be dangerous. Most aren’t too good at pursuit, and zeds don’t often lay ambushes. Crocodiles and a few of the related large predators could be a problem.
Rodents… Genetically close to us, and oh so many. Many will bite humans under the right circumstances. If all the rats of New York turned, I dare say the city could not be saved. You’d need a fortification with no entrance point larger than a half inch square, maybe smaller, or alternately a metric ton of shotgun shells, a shotgun, and something to stuff your ears. Or a fuel-guzzling ring of fire. Rats, squirrels, mice, all adept at probing around for goodies, all decent climbers, and most all available in every human settlement across the world in at least one form. One good thing: Most of these creatures have instincts telling them that they are made to be food more often than feeder, the virus may fail to make killers of most of the rodent species.
Fish… Far from us in genetics, and even if you plan involves using large water bodies to your advantage, you probably don’t have a ten-mile swim planned. If you do, I suggest you re-evaluate that part of the plan. If you can put a pool full of piranhas between you and an approaching zed, good for you. However, I don’t think I have any friends with piranha pools, not anymore anyway. Sharks might eat zed-pieces, but there are no diseases capable of infecting sharks today, and I doubt this virus will be it. Whether a shark is a zombie or not might not matter much anyway, if you see the fin break the surface, you should react like you are threatened. Fish in general seem a rather underwhelming foe.
Whales are mammals, but most don’t interact much with humans, zed-vir would likely not change that. Since the largest ones don’t have teeth, it’s mostly in terms of capsizing boats they post a danger.
Now here’s the task: Describe anything obvious that was missed here, and how you would face off against a multi-species zed-attack.
The above article was submitted by one of our faithful readers. If you have an article you would like posted for debate, please let us know.
Comments (28)









ZzDeuceX on 29 Jul 2008 at 9:30 pm #
Okay. Insects. It’s hard to believe that this one got missed. The are millions more insects in one jungle than there are people on earth. In the massive Zed-sect swarms that would be created, they could wipe out entire nations. Ignoring that, it brings us to…BEARS! I cant imagine a worse thing to become a zombie! The senses of a dog combined with the strength of a gorrilla…Zed-bears. House cats went un-mentioned as well. They are like dogs with their senses, but quicker. Chances are that they wont kill you, but they might infect you before they get stamped into the dust. Let us all hope that the infection stays localized and human-biased. Let us hope, I dare say, for the “Max Brooks” zombie…
Death or Glory on 29 Jul 2008 at 11:08 pm #
Alright, well, I don’t think it will be a cross-species virus, but, if it is, there is one outcome: we are screwed. Bugs, dogs, cats, rats, bedbugs, deer, etc zombies, and we are all totally boned. They are either faster, stealthier, or invisib…ely…er, and we’d all get it somehow. If its can get into animals, who says it can’t affect parasites, or hell, even natural flora, like the shit that is on your skin RIGHT F-ING NOW? I dunno. Point being, i think if this is possible, there is no point in discussing zombies ever again, cuz the world ends, plain and simple, therefore, lets stick to the so called “Max Brooks” Zombie.
The Doctor on 30 Jul 2008 at 1:25 am #
A zed elephant would scare the crap out of me. Also wolves. A zombie Giraffe would just be plain weird.
Maleia on 30 Jul 2008 at 9:04 am #
I think a zombie cow would be hilarious. In a “let’s get the hell outta here” sort of way. What about animals like deer… or moose and elk? Those things can get HUGE.
Leper on 30 Jul 2008 at 1:20 pm #
My plan for a multi-species outbreak? Honestly, I’m unsure. I’d like to think I’m one of the sort tht would go down fighting until the very end, but the truth is, it’s a very, VERY bleak picture.
Any outbreak that consists of problems much larger than “human/primate only” infection and manifestation* is a situation in which you may want to simply find a nice, comfortable way to die. The Earth and its ecosystems depend on a large variety of little critters to work properly. Herbivores, predators, scavengers, parasites, etc all play a big part in how things continue to function, so when you start wholesale eliminating other species (or entire families or even a good portion of a specific role–all the predators for instance) from that chain it’s a bit like taking swings at a house of cards… with a Buick. You may well be able to scavenge up enough to subsist for the rest of your natural life, perhaps even enough to fuel a generation or two of survivors, but that’s actually being a bit optimistic. A contagion like this that became a multi-species pandemic is pretty much a good indicator that Earth fails. “You have no chance to survive. Make your time.”
With a ‘narrow spectrum’ virus, things are… somewhat simpler. Even if human-based hostiles choose to engage non-human targets, the elimination of a good portion of mankind would be disastrous, but not an unrecoverable setback. Some extremists might well argue that roving bands of carnivorous cadavers that aren’t picky about the sort of meat they’re after (or are just willing to settle) zombies wouldn’t be much different from the way most of humanity works now (I disagree–I stop killing and eating once I’ve satisfied my biological imperatives) but the truth is they would be an environmental threat as well as one to humanity–but a manageable one. Many animals are used to dealing with predators which are faster, stronger more coordinated and operate on a higher level than what one could expect either from what is essentially a dull-witted man without the use of tools.
* Note that even a virus capable of being carried by other species may not always effect the carriers. Aside from parasites and insects similar to mosquitoes, certain similar species can carry diseases while remaining largely unaffected while the disease may have a high fatality rate in ‘cousins’ of that species. For an example, see FIV and it’s (lack of) effects on the African Lion.
3ID on 30 Jul 2008 at 4:21 pm #
yeah if it can get to animals then what about mosquitoes that would change the face of zombie outbreak one tiny bite and poof your a zed head
sean on 30 Jul 2008 at 10:13 pm #
right now i’m just thinking about a zombie bear
that would be a killing machine
Blitz Haigen on 30 Jul 2008 at 11:29 pm #
If there is a cross-species virus, such as resident evil’s T-virus, we are FUCKED, period. I don’t actually see, in my mind’s eye, any kind of zombie having the coordination to fly, regardless of the base organism. But, insects, rodents, and anything small enough to fit through the nooks and crannies may actually end us. Even if the virus didn’t affect these other animals, it would be no problem for them to carry it like rats carried the plague in the middle ages. With Garbage and rot everywhere in unmanned, unmaintained facilities and abandoned homes, the world would become the perfect utopia for a virus (Not to mention that T-virus has the capacity to horribly mutate anything it touches).
In the case of a virus like Mr. Brooks’ Solanum (Zombie Survival Guide, The Virus), It may end up not touching them or perhaps just turning them into eternally starving, flesh craving blobs such as it seems to do to humans. This does not remove the threat of them, but it would seem to me that they might have more of a problem moving than we would. If you imagine the shambling, unbalanced human zombie being unable to keep track of where his legs are, imagine a zombie brain the size of a grain of sand trying to keep track of 6-8 legs. Or maybe a zombie bird trying to fly when it can’t even maintain standing balance. How about a rat that can’t put enough strength behind one leg to crawl up a wall desperately attempting to control 4? My point is that it would be likely less of a burden than we have discussed here.
The downside to this would be if I’m wrong and there were house cat zeds jumping over the six foot fence, and swarms of cockroaches descending from the sky in a cloud of multi-legged death, and rats decided to build a nest in our brains, and seagulls organized precision dives into our eyes, and everything else we can think of.
Really, we have no idea what would happen. Not you, not me. So who do you think will win?
Kasper on 31 Jul 2008 at 5:46 am #
I’d missed both cats and insects, damn.
If “it” spreads via mosquito bites, I hope the media will get around to telling everybody before the radio-silence sets in. Don’t personally have a mosquito net, but I could cut down my usage of fresh air. I don’t think insect-zeds would have trouble coordinating their legs, they don’t use much brain power for that anyway, as can be seen in severed ones. A spray-can and a lighter would do little good against a swarm of locusts, let’s hope it doesn’t get that bad. There’s barely any brain to infect, so it’s probably more an issue of corpse-flies carrying the virus than walking-corpse-flies doing so.
A cat or dog can run pretty fast when they want too, so I think any pet-zeds should get bullet-priority. As for birds, if they fly, some sort of wire-fence is a must to protect from attack from above. If they walk, they’ll likely get trampled by agitated zeds. Remember, a good piece of strong wire an inch or two from the ground can be a good thing if you remember where it is.
As for zombie-rats, and most small animals… They might force a reevaluation of using an vehicles as your base. An average rat can move some four kilometers (about 2,5 miles?) a day. It can thus be outrun.
If there’s a mix of zed-species covering more than two “groups” of zombies, I think we’re done for. A bear to tear down barricades, human-zeds to suck up ammunition, some dogs, deer or wolves to pursue… You need napalm for that kind of opposition, and a lot of it too.
A relatively narrow virus might infect just one or two species beyond humans, that could probably be handled.
In Dawn of the Dead (2004) the survivors readily accept the dog they find in the parking garage… Which, while it contained a few zombies, was apparently closed off enough to permit significant construction work. What did the dog eat down there for the several days it took the survivors to get down there? Zombie legs? Don’t let strange dogs lick you, seriously.
instruisto on 02 Aug 2008 at 12:20 am #
Once again, the ignorance of history appalls me. Animals never become zombies. Period. They don’t have human souls and thus cannot become soulless husks the way humans can. The Cathars were well aware of this fact but their information was unfortunately long suppressed.
However, zombies will attack pigs for their brains, as the pig brain and human brain can be remarkably similar. The Southern breakfast of eggs and brains has an unspeakable connection to this fact as interpreted through a certain New Orleans cult. A writer from New England did extensive research on this cult and its practices in the 1920s but cloaked his work in fiction out of fear.
Some African shamans tell similar stories about great apes being stalked by zombies but i cannot confirm that beyond hearsay evidence. I assume most great apes could escape or defeat zombies.
Other supernatural phenomena can affect animals. Only in exceptional circumstances can pigs be possessed by unclean spirits and in all such cases the animal “kills itself” as the unclean spirit seeks to free itself from an incompatible host. The animal’s possession will last no more than minutes and has never resulted in documented harm to humans.
Saeferth on 02 Aug 2008 at 4:41 am #
insects and rodents would be my biggest problem. i intend on wearing armour during the zompocalypse (i can make chainmaille and leather armour, and can improvise for other pieces) so larger animals wont be so much of a danger. but insects and small animals can slip between plates. thankfully i dont have to worry about large animals too much. there havent been any wolves or bears in england for a long long time. and the largest wild animal we have now are deer… of course if anything escaped from the zoo that could prove quite a problem
Pierce on 02 Aug 2008 at 1:47 pm #
Hunting most wild animals is difficult enough for the living armed with modern weaponry. A shambling zombie will not be able to catch and bite most anything.
I was also under the impression that zombie flesh was toxic to consume, although I do not recall if it was contagious when it was done.
According to Mr. Brooks, carnivores and parasites (such as mosquitos) detect and pass over the toxins in zombiesI’m not sure they would feed on the living dead to begin with.
Assuming various animals were zombified however, compare what it does to the human brain to what it might do to an animal. It converts the human brain into an independent organ that uses what tools are available and connected to it to pursue and consume other flesh.
Bears would no longer be as ferocious as they were in life, the same way a professional fighter will no longer be aggressive and skilled the way he was in life. It will simply be a physically larger flesh seeker. It will not run faster than a human, because it wont run.
I also have serious doubts as to whether flying animals will continue to fly, or leaping animals like cats will continue to leap. I believe they will simply shamble around on 4 legs and try and bite whatever they can.
If anything they will pose a risk similar to a human zombie that has lost its legs. The animals will be so low to the ground that you don’t see them as readily.
If anything I believe only minor additional challenges will be presented should the zombifying condition be capable of being spread to other animal species.
1. Small size. Smaller animals will be able to shamble and “explore” through some fortifications that would keep a human zombie out. This can be guarded against by increased vigilance (obviously difficult under stress) and more diligent watch rotations. You don’t have to waste a bullet on a slow moving small woodland creature, the heel of your boot will do just fine.
2. Large size. Zombies in undeath have the same muscles that the living version had. Thus while a bear zombie would not be as ferocious, it would be stronger. A flimsier barricade that would have kept a fewhuman zombies at bay will be more easily torn down. However, a barricade that flimsy would not survive against dozens of human zombies anyways.
As mentioned above, however, I think that even if they are susceptible to zombifying conditions, animal zombies would be rare due to animals possessing increased escape, evade, and survival instincts that have long since been silenced in humanity.
Goldfish on 05 Aug 2008 at 9:39 pm #
I’m going to echo some sentiments from previous posts: let’s hope that there isn’t such a thing as a cross species zed. The animals on this planet vastly outnumber humans, breed like (pardon the pun) rabbits, are faster and have more keen senses. Luckily for us the Zed Vir is most likely going to be more related to humans in the first place, and human viruses rarely have any impact on animals (it normally goes the other way: see Avian Flu, AIDS, smallpox, etc.). Also, in a more Max Brooks definition, infected flesh would not attract much more than carrion feeders, and animals that are actually caught by zeds would more often than not be completely devoured. The very nature of the zombie is not “spread->infect” but “spread->eat”. In summation, let’s focus on the human factor of the zombie3. Oh, and PS: Insects wouldn’t have the proper circulatory system to really spread the virus.
Wayne Brady on 14 Aug 2008 at 2:36 am #
An interesting scenario would be the zombie cows. One gets infected and eventually the whole ranch becomes a stampede of raging zacks!!! Let us hope the virus is human specific
Elliott on 14 Aug 2008 at 7:40 pm #
Zombie sheep! …wait, they already made that movie - and it’s pretty freaking silly/great. Check out Black Sheep sometime.
katy on 15 Aug 2008 at 7:07 am #
obviously, an infected insect bite would cause someone to turn. but would infected animals attack humans beyond the normal amount of animals attacking humans? dogs when trained to will attack. zombie dogs when starved then unleashed will attack anything. a bear you cross in the woods might attack, zombie or not. so… would all the cows be running in a circle attacking each other? would there be colonies of cats running after one another while we did the same, running away from our zombie contemporaries? if the species are after themselves and we’re still just out to lob off humanish heads, while wearing lots and lots of bug repellant, then that’s not too much worse really. but if my cats wake up one morning and chew my limbs off, then i’m going to start locking them out of the bedroom at night…
Avakar on 18 Aug 2008 at 12:55 am #
OK, lets look at this from a logical and observed point of view. How do zombies move and behave? Slow, lumbering, uncoordinated, disoriented and cannibalistic. Now take that and put it with an animal. Some of you are going on the “Resident Evil” perspective that would leave all animals as some super animal hybrid hell bent on eating humans. If human zombies were after humans and ignore on the most part all other species, wouldn’t that serve the same result for animals? That they would feed on their own kind first? The title of undead or zombie does not imply that they are “programed” to eat only humans, but it’s observed that they really only go after humans, not animals.
If an Animal was to be infected they would only be able to perform the most basic of motor functions: walking and feeding. That’s right, birds would not be able to fly, they would be off balance and no longer have a functioning nervous system necessary to feel wind currents, this means a couple of good things: easy to avoid, easy to kill and no more bird crap on your car ^_^.
Basically take every animal and dumb it down. Dogs would be slow and cumbersome. same for snakes and reptiles. Fish and whales would be a joke. Your main issue would be the rodents, they are small and eat everything and anything, after they are done with them selves they will start on every other living thing faster than any other animal. As for the bear…. slow, heavy, easy kill. If you want a real life example just look at Mad Cow Disease and you’ll see what I’m talking about.
Insects are a whole other factor, insects have proven hearty to disease, your real concern is parasites: fleas, ticks, mosquitoes. They would most likely prove more troublesome not as being infected but as carriers. If they were infected, it would be the same issue with animals, uncoordinated, nonflying and stupid.
In the end its not the fact that the animals are being turned that would be the issue, but the fact that we would be losing our food supply. So salt that meat, stock those meat lockers and start cooking that jerky. It could be a long end for us.
AsteriskXIII on 18 Aug 2008 at 8:00 pm #
The thing about Mosquitoes is that in order for them to transmit the virus, the virus would need to be strong enough to survive the stomach of the mosquito. If the virus cannot survive and somehow make its way to the salivary glands the chance of infection by being bitten is not very high.
Plus you’d need to take into account how many particles of the virus it takes to transmit it, and how many particles of it circulate in the blood of the infected.
Even if the infected circulated high levels of the virus, chances of getting it from a mosquito are small because the salivary and food canals are separated, the mosquito does not regurgitate the blood before it bites you, it just expels saliva. So unless the virus was strong enough to survive inside the stomach and make its way into the salivary glands, you wont be infected by it.
So don’t focus on the mosquitoes..worry more about the barreling stampede coming from the Zoo, or the fact that your neighbors are going to try to eat you…..
Kain - ZAC Weapon Consultant on 19 Aug 2008 at 1:31 pm #
Mosquitoes could be a problem, not because of their bite, well not particularly, they feed on blood. If they were to ingest, even a small quantity of blood from one of the infected even before said infected had become a zombie then they could be a danger to those who are not infected. Supposing the virus effects them at all, I can see the jump to of mammalian species like chimps and the great apes, not reptiles though.
True the future is bleak if the zombie virus was to mutate, and lets hope it doesn’t, but that shouldn’t stop zombies from attacking other species. Lets all remember one of the tactics to kill in Max Brooks’ book was to bait them in with live bait, a cat or dog, so I believe this ends the discussion on whether or not zeds would be attracted to other animals.
On a final note viruses and diseases mutate constantly so lets not rule this scenario out just quite yet. We also must consider that the virus might jump the species gap but just because it does not mean that the virus would be dangerous to us, necessarily, it could kill us, but not turn us. I know that might not be a lot of help, but its something. In all reality, it a change that animals could become infected and only give a danger to others of their kind.
“They won’t get me they won’t get me thought they never cease to try
they won’t get me they won’t get me I would rather fight and die
they won’t get me they won’t get me well my friend will they get you?
when they get you when they get you tell me what are you gonna do?”
Dropkick Murphys - The Gauntlet
jjc on 14 Sep 2008 at 5:20 pm #
Their is really only three things that need to be mention here two of which kind of already have been. First is the real main problem, if animals can turn it is no longer safe to eat meat. Which means in the zombie apocalypse we will all have to become vegetarians, crap. Secondly, though insects may be able to turn they probably won’t be large enough to pass enough infected material onto you so ultimately the insect won’t pose a significant threat. Third and most interestingly no one mentioned is the brain case. A zombie bear isn’t merely stronger but more importantly has a thicker skull. That 22 your carrying won’t do shit and that 9mm may not do you much good either. Just in case you haven’t thought about it yet this means a zombie elephant would be all but indestructible. Happy hunting.
AssasinatingTheZombies on 14 Oct 2008 at 12:17 pm #
WHAT IF OUR WATER SUPPPLY GETS INFECTED….WE NEED A WAY TO GET UNINFECTED FOOD AND WATER
WE CANNOT TRUST TAPS,LAKES, SEA’S, RESOVOIRS…CUD WE TRUST CONDENSATION?
cud the air carry the zombie virus, even if it is dormant there?
THIS NEEDS TO BE DISCUSSED
THERES NO POINT FIGHTING ZOMBIES IF WE CANT GET ACCESS TO FRESH UNINFECTED WATER…I MEAN, U OBV CANT BARRICADE URSELF
also, a way to escape…light a fire, put a black bag in it, black smoke…wud a. if any army or owt is flying past, wud notice its a help sign, and place ur arm (cut off) or say, a pure chicken, onto the fire, about half foot away, it will cook, and as fresh meat, has a high %age of attracting the zombie nation, u cud even make it a killing zone, an ambush if u will
and make a dodgy joke about you being dead inside if ur a mass murderer…possibilities, and survivial
WE CANNOT TRUST WATER!
Dreamornaut on 17 Oct 2008 at 1:55 am #
Well just talking about the ‘Max Brooks’ zombie, it’s not so much that zombies ignore other species, but that other species including micro-organism avoid them. A zed who somehow gets hold of a animal will infect it, but it only causes perminant death. The plus side is that even if a zombie could infect and zombify animals, it would still be rare since it would be dificult for the slow shambling corpses to catch them.
Now if these solanumbulists did not have this animal revulsion element, then there would be a chance for mutations allowing cross species mutations. In that case, on the up side, the zombies would decompose normally and have an extremely reduced ‘life-span’, though if somehow a very few people somehow survived this they would find themselves in a world that would be nothing but insects and plants. Hell, in the deep south for instance, the disease would likely run it’s course in a matter of months at the most considering the usual rates of decomposition. This means that the survival strategy would have to be changed from making a life in an undead world to one of locking yourself in a fortified quarentined area for less then a year in most places. After even six months, the dead still walking would likely be far to weak and feeble to really pose a threat. Though admitably, the likelyhood of making it that long would still be almost nil.
KC on 17 Oct 2008 at 3:54 pm #
If one species can become infected, it could affect an entire ecosystem if they are susceptible to it. Just from going up the food-chain and after the individual dies, being eaten by scavengers(rats, dogs, etc) and microscopic bacteria.
Blood-drinking mosquitoes only drink blood when they need supplements for their eggs. Normally, they drink nectar like the males. I’d hope that zed mosquitoes wouldn’t feel the urge to breed so it could only be passed if there remains a significant amount of virus-free mosquitoes that, to devleop eggs, feed on the blood of the infected.
demonspawnjake on 29 Oct 2008 at 12:37 am #
i think most animals would keep away from the the living dead all together at FIRST but when push come to shove im sure theyd eat that zombies body when hungry. i think theyd be like a four legged zombie slow and dumb as for bird dont think theyd fly and i dont think we have worry about roaches the only thing that would kill them are shoes lawl. but if you dont have a firearm something like a zombie bear would be horrible,it would be very resistant to melee weapons such as shovels,bats,tire irons etc. so if ya do see a zombie bear run like hell or shoot it in the face if ya got a gun
Ryan on 25 Nov 2008 at 9:39 pm #
I think the guy who has hydrophobia has a decent point. If the mosquitos can catch it they breed in standing water meaning you have to have running water to avoid them. Also if the water were to become contaminated you could just boil it, this almost always works. The reason I know that distilling it yourself works is that I use to live right next to a lake and the water didn’t get filtered properly or something because the water that came from the sinks was pure lake water, still sorta green looking if you fill the sink or bathtub. Also distilled water tastes worse than lake water but its much safer.
Another thing you forgot, aligators/crocodiles/frogs/other amphibious animals. They all go back and forth between land and water meaning if it can spread to them crocodiles have a natural ability to run at 30 mph if i remember correctly… or mabey it was aligators… well one of them does. Frogs don’t bite, but they can pee on you and possibly infect you that way through a wart.
Another thing, if zombies were to actually come about nothing would work except natural instincts meaning animals will act exactly the same as normal only slightly less brain function. People on the other hand only have one natural instinct which is the ability to breathe (eating has to be taught its not something you learn on your own as a child). All other instincts have to be learned from someone who happened to develop their own instincts due to their own lifestyle. That also means with the exception of speach humans will act exactly as they did prior to zombification (this means factory workers for 40 years will still be able to do their job as zombies) also they would probably be moderately retarded as far as brain function goes. All the violence would be a result from desperation (as the natural habbit to eat out or at home would most likely still be there till food ran out) and starvation. This also means that vegitarians that have the instinct to go for veggies would probably start eating grass and trees and die off from lack of noticing those poisonous red berries or that poison ivy/oak/sumak that is starting to cause their throat to swell up on the inside. That principal would definately apply to animals, after a few days of no food in their normal location they get rather violent. If youve ever forgotten to feed your dog for a few days you know exactly what I’m talking about. As for herbavores even if they were to get infected I wouldn’t worry too much as their teeth are not designed for biting into flesh the way omnivores and perdators are. That also means once all those bears you were talking about run out of fish and the various types of plants that they can eat you’re completely screwed if you live in a bear populated area.
Anyway my main point is if a zompocalypse happens you most likely won’t realize it until all the normal food is gone and you are staring at one of your neighbors is trying to take a bite out of you or one of your other neighbors, and by then its already waaaay too late to get out or prepared.
Marius on 31 Dec 2008 at 12:36 am #
Well if we look at the “Return” zacks, it could be caused by a chemical reaction that is cross species. And in a case like that, I’d really had to see Zack-Roaches. At that point, pretty much just game over. We can’t kill them off now, think of how much worse it would be if they were undead. And yes I’ve seen roach bites on humans, so cross contamination would be an issue.
GonzoTheBurner on 01 Jan 2009 at 7:12 am #
We never will know for sure what will actually happen, but the origin of the disease (if it is a viral infection) can give clues to solving this matter. My best guess is that this Z-virus could be a natural or engineered version of rabies. With advances in bio technology these days, I don’t think too many people would say it’s far fetched that the rabies virus could be altered and turned into a zombie creating biological weapon.
If this is so, it’s very likely that interspecies infections would take place. Like most have said, the animals would more than likely stay away from infected attackers. Though I find this notion, or more like a optimistic rule of slow and clumsy undead moaners, as a misplaced faith in hoping the beloved “documentaries” we hold dear, are accurate. I imagine it would be more like 28 days later, with freshly infected “undead” retaining much of their motor skills. At this early stage, they may be even more swift and enduring than a healthy, uninfected human. They could possibley catch animals. The thought of cats is the one I would be worried about most, but I think the most likely are rats, mice and maybe the mosquitos.
I would like to omit birds, because I don’t recall birds being suseptible to rabies, but you never know. All candidates are possible.
Phantom-edge on 03 Jan 2009 at 8:14 am #
To be honest,unless somebody deals with the animal zombie outbreak we are pretty much doomed.why you ask? Mainly because of all the discussed topics,water,meat but let’s not forget the environmental catastrophy that would occur,Imagine if all animals were zombiefied ,water unless filtered would be a hazard,without water plantlife would suffer and it would be completely destroyed if animals such as bees would be zombified……LOL…..anywho it would be pretty much game over if animals were to become infected….2-3months tops you would survive.god dam does it hurt to type in an itouch.