LETHAL FAUNA · VOL. I Afghanistan
— Territory Dossier —

🇦🇫 Afghanistan

Hindu Kush peaks and dusty plains — snow leopards above, vipers below
Saw-scaled
Top killer viper
Hindu Kush
Snow leopards (~150)
Asian
Black bears in mountains
FIG. 01 Reptile
№ 01 / 13
Reptile · Viperidae

Saw-Scaled Viper

Echis carinatus
Threat Level
Most fatal snakebites in the world
Description

Small (50-90 cm), sandy-coloured viper with serrated scales that rasp together producing a warning sound. Despite size, considered the world's deadliest snake by total kill count.

The Danger

Estimated to cause 20,000+ deaths annually across its range — more than any other snake. Hemotoxin causes uncontrolled bleeding. Highly aggressive — strikes without provocation.

Habitat

Dry regions from West Africa across Middle East to India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka. Sand, scrub, rocky desert.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Makes a distinctive 'sizzling' sound by rubbing serrated scales — a warning. Strikes faster than human reflexes — multiple times per second.

FIG. 02 Insect
№ 02 / 13
Insect · Culicidae

Asian Malaria Mosquito

Anopheles stephensi
Threat Level
Top vector of human deaths in history
Description

5-7 mm mosquito. The primary vector of malaria in urban South Asia. As a species group, mosquitoes have killed more humans than any other animal in history.

The Danger

Malaria kills 600,000+ people/year globally — most in tropical Asia and Africa. Dengue, lymphatic filariasis, Japanese encephalitis also transmitted. India: 200,000+ malaria cases/year.

Habitat

Urban and peri-urban areas of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia, parts of Middle East, Horn of Africa.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Bites at dusk and dawn. Breeds in wells, water storage containers, construction sites. Now spreading to African cities.

FIG. 03 Arachnid
№ 03 / 13
Arachnid · Buthidae

Arabian Fat-Tailed Scorpion

Androctonus crassicauda
Threat Level
Genus name means 'man-killer'
Description

Black scorpion 8-10 cm with thick muscular tail. Genus name 'Androctonus' means 'man-killer'. Causes most scorpion deaths in the Middle East.

The Danger

Potent neurotoxin causes hypertension, pulmonary edema, cardiac failure. Several hundred deaths/year across Arabian Peninsula, Iraq, Iran. Children especially vulnerable.

Habitat

Saudi Arabia, UAE, Oman, Yemen, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Jordan. Hot deserts, rocky terrain, occasionally homes.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Hides under stones and in cracks by day. Can be common in homes after construction in former desert.

FIG. 04 Insect
№ 04 / 13
Insect · Culicidae

Yellow Fever Mosquito

Aedes aegypti
Threat Level
Primary dengue + yellow fever vector
Description

Distinctive black mosquito with white lyre-shaped markings on thorax. Primary vector of dengue, yellow fever, Zika, chikungunya in tropical Asia.

The Danger

Dengue: 4 billion at risk globally, 40,000 deaths/year, mostly in Asia. 2024 outbreak in Bangladesh killed 1,705. Bangkok, Manila, Karachi seasonal epidemics.

Habitat

Urban areas of all tropical and subtropical Asia. Domestic breeder — flowerpots, water tanks, gutters, AC drips.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Daytime biter (unlike most mosquitoes). Bites multiple people per blood meal — spreads disease efficiently.

FIG. 05 Reptile
№ 05 / 13
Reptile · Viperidae

Russell's Viper

Daboia russelii
Threat Level
Most human deaths of any snake
Description

Up to 1.7 m. Brown with characteristic three rows of dark oval blotches. Considered the deadliest snake species by human mortality — causes the most deaths of any snake worldwide.

The Danger

Hemotoxic venom causes massive bleeding, kidney failure, pituitary damage ('Sheehan-like syndrome'). Kills ~30,000 people per year in India alone.

Habitat

Open grasslands, scrub forests, farmland across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, southern China, Taiwan.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly nocturnal. Hisses loudly when threatened — louder than any other snake. Coiled tight in S-shape, strikes with explosive speed.

FIG. 06 Arachnid
№ 06 / 13
Arachnid · Buthidae

Deathstalker Scorpion

Leiurus quinquestriatus
Threat Level
Most venomous scorpion in the world
Description

Yellow scorpion 7-11 cm. Slender pincers, thick stinger tail. Considered the most venomous scorpion in the world by neurotoxin potency.

The Danger

Powerful neurotoxin cocktail — drop for drop one of nature's deadliest substances. Mortality in children up to 70% without antivenom. 1-2 mg of venom worth $39,000 on research market.

Habitat

Deserts and scrubland from North Africa across Middle East — Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Hides under stones, in burrows, in shoes left outdoors. Aggressive — strikes repeatedly when disturbed. Glows green under UV.

FIG. 07 Reptile
№ 07 / 13
Reptile · Elapidae

Caspian Cobra

Naja oxiana
Threat Level
Only cobra of Central Asia
Description

Yellow-brown cobra up to 1.8 m without the 'spectacles' marking. The only cobra in former Soviet Central Asia. Highly aggressive.

The Danger

Most potent venom of any Naja species in Asia — pure neurotoxin. Mortality without antivenom ~80%. Several hundred bites per year across range.

Habitat

Rocky hills, irrigation canals, agricultural areas of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, northern Iran, Afghanistan, northern Pakistan, northwestern India (Punjab).

Behavior & Lifestyle

Diurnal in cooler months, crepuscular in heat. Aggressive — defends territory. Often found near rural homes.

FIG. 08 Arachnid
№ 08 / 13
Arachnid · Ixodidae

Castor Bean Tick

Ixodes ricinus
Threat Level
Lyme disease and TBE vector
Description

Small, dark tick — the primary disease vector in Europe. Despite being only 3–4 mm, kills more Europeans annually than any other animal.

The Danger

Transmits Lyme borreliosis (200,000+ cases/year), tick-borne encephalitis (3,500+ cases/year, ~30 deaths), babesiosis, anaplasmosis. The TBE vaccine exists.

Habitat

Forests, parks, tall grass, urban green spaces. Most active April–June and September–October.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Quests on grass tips and twigs, latching on contact. Seeks warm, moist body sites. Feeds for 3–7 days before dropping off.

FIG. 09 Mammal
№ 09 / 13
Mammal · Felidae

Indian Leopard

Panthera pardus fusca
Threat Level
More attacks on humans than tigers
Description

Up to 75 kg. Tawny gold with black rosettes. India has ~12,000 leopards — many living near human settlements, leading to frequent conflicts.

The Danger

Kills more humans annually in India than tigers — ~150 deaths/year, mostly children taken at night. Champawat leopard killed 200+; Panar leopard 400.

Habitat

Forests across all of India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Pakistan. Increasingly common in suburbs and villages bordering reserves.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal stalker. Excellent climber — drags prey into trees. Quietly enters villages at night. Once a man-eater, hard to stop.

FIG. 10 Mammal
№ 10 / 13
Mammal · Ursidae

Asian Black Bear

Ursus thibetanus
Threat Level
Aggressive — more attacks than other bears
Description

Up to 200 kg. Black with distinctive white V on chest ('moon bear'). More aggressive toward humans than American black bear.

The Danger

Highest rate of unprovoked attacks among any bear species. Japan: 5-15 deaths/year, India: 10+ deaths in Kashmir alone. Mauls — targets face and head.

Habitat

Forests from Iran east through Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan, China, Japan, Russian Far East, Vietnam, Taiwan, Korea.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly solitary, partly arboreal. Hibernates in north. More day-active than other bears. Attacks if cornered or with cubs.

FIG. 11 Arachnid
№ 11 / 13
Arachnid · Buthidae

Lesser Asian Scorpion

Mesobuthus eupeus
Threat Level
Most widespread Asian scorpion
Description

Yellow-brown scorpion 4-5 cm with dark stripes. The most widespread scorpion in Central Asia and the Caucasus — found from Turkey to China.

The Danger

Venom is much less potent than Centruroides or Androctonus. Stings cause intense pain, swelling, burning, occasionally numbness. Rarely life-threatening to healthy adults — but children and allergics at risk.

Habitat

Arid steppes and semi-deserts of Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia), Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, southern Mongolia, northern China.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Doesn't dig burrows — uses natural cracks and spaces under stones. Active spring–autumn. Hibernates in winter.

FIG. 12 Mammal
№ 12 / 13
Mammal · Canidae

Grey Wolf

Canis lupus
Threat Level
Rabid attacks possible
Description

European wolf, smaller than its Russian or American cousins. Returning to Western Europe after centuries of absence — first wolves in Belgium since 1900 arrived in 2018.

The Danger

Healthy wolves almost never attack humans — only 0–2 fatal attacks per decade in Europe. The real risk is rabid individuals; rabies is now mostly eliminated in Western Europe.

Habitat

Forests and mountains of Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, the Balkans, and increasingly Germany, France, Belgium, and the Alps.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Hunts in packs. Highly intelligent and avoids humans. Communicates by howling over distances of 10 km.

FIG. 13 Arachnid
№ 13 / 13
Arachnid · Buthidae

Caucasian Scorpion

Mesobuthus caucasicus
Threat Level
Found across Central Asia
Description

Slightly larger relative of M. eupeus — up to 6 cm. Yellow-brown body. Common in deserts and steppes of Central Asia.

The Danger

Painful sting with local symptoms. Not considered medically dangerous to healthy adults. Risk only for children and those with allergies.

Habitat

Sandy and clay deserts of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan, eastern Iran.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Active in warm months. Hides under stones and in cracks of dry earth during day.