LETHAL FAUNA Andorra
— Territory Dossier —

🇦🇩 Andorra

Pyrenean micro-state with reintroduced bears
85
Brown bears in Pyrenees
2
Native viper species
468
km² total area
FIG. 01 Mammal
№ 01 / 07
Mammal · Ursidae

European Brown Bear

Ursus arctos arctos
Threat Level
Largest land predator
Description

Largest land predator in Europe. Males reach 350 kg. Mostly omnivorous; can outrun a horse over short distances and is an excellent swimmer and tree-climber when young.

The Danger

Attacks rare but documented — about 10 fatal attacks per decade across Europe. Most occur when surprising a sow with cubs or a wounded individual.

Habitat

Mountain forests of the Carpathians, Scandinavia, Balkans, Pyrenees, Alps, and Russian taiga.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Hibernates Nov–Mar in dens. Active at dawn and dusk. A sow defending cubs is the most dangerous scenario.

FIG. 02 Arachnid
№ 02 / 07
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. 03 Reptile
№ 03 / 07
Reptile · Viperidae

Asp Viper

Vipera aspis
Threat Level
Most snakebites in France and Italy
Description

Up to 75 cm with an upturned snout. Causes the majority of snakebites in France, Switzerland, and northern Italy — about 1,000 envenomations annually.

The Danger

Venom is more potent than the common viper. About 4% of untreated bites are fatal. Severe tissue damage common; victims often need months of recovery.

Habitat

Sun-warmed slopes, dry meadows, vineyards, and forest edges in southwestern Europe.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Less retiring than common viper. Strikes with little warning when stepped on or grabbed. Mating in spring; gives birth to live young.

FIG. 04 Reptile
№ 04 / 07
Reptile · Viperidae

Iberian Viper

Vipera seoanei
Threat Level
Iberian peninsula endemic
Description

Endemic to northern Spain and Portugal. Up to 75 cm. Variable colouration but typically grey-brown with darker zigzag.

The Danger

Hemotoxin causes pain and swelling. Bites uncommon — about 50 per year in Galicia, Asturias, northern Portugal. Antivenom available.

Habitat

Atlantic coastal forests, mountain meadows, and pastures of northwestern Iberia.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Cool-climate adapted. Active by day in spring and autumn. Often seen basking on stone walls and dry-stone field boundaries.

FIG. 05 Mammal
№ 05 / 07
Mammal · Suidae

Wild Boar

Sus scrofa
Threat Level
Frequent goring incidents
Description

Common throughout Europe. Males reach 200 kg with razor-sharp tusks. Adapts well to humans — boars now roam parks of Berlin, Rome, and Barcelona; 3,000+ in Berlin alone.

The Danger

Causes more wild-animal injuries in Europe than any predator. A sow defending piglets or a wounded male can disembowel within seconds.

Habitat

Forests, fields, and increasingly suburban areas of major cities.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Lives in family groups (sounders). Active at dusk and night. Charges with tusks aimed at the legs and groin — capable of 40 km/h.

FIG. 06 Insect
№ 06 / 07
Insect · Vespidae

European Hornet

Vespa crabro
Threat Level
Anaphylaxis risk
Description

Up to 3.5 cm — Europe's largest social wasp. Yellow-brown with reddish-brown markings. Builds papery nests in tree hollows and attics.

The Danger

A single sting is painful but rarely lethal. Multiple stings or anaphylactic shock can kill — about 30 deaths per year across Europe from wasp/hornet stings combined.

Habitat

Forests, gardens, villages, and city parks across most of Europe except the far north.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Active by day. Hunts other insects — a colony eats 500 g of insects daily. Defends the nest collectively when disturbed within 5 m.

FIG. 07 Mammal
№ 07 / 07
Mammal · Cervidae

Red Deer

Cervus elaphus
Threat Level
Vehicle collisions, rut attacks
Description

Largest European deer — stags up to 240 kg with massive antlers. Found from Scotland to the Carpathians.

The Danger

Hundreds of vehicle collisions yearly across Europe. Stags during the September–October rut occasionally attack humans, dogs, even cars — antlers are deadly.

Habitat

Forests, moors, and parklands across Europe.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Lives in single-sex herds outside the rut. Stags roar to attract hinds; the sound carries for kilometres.