LETHAL FAUNA Ecuador
— Territory Dossier —

🇪🇨 Ecuador

Galápagos, Amazon, and Andes — Andean and Amazonian fauna meet
1,500
Snake bites per year
Galápagos
Sharks: hammerheads, tigers
Amazon
Eastern lowlands
FIG. 01 Reptile
№ 01 / 11
Reptile · Viperidae

Fer-de-Lance (Terciopelo)

Bothrops asper
Threat Level
Most dangerous snake of Latin America
Description

Heavy-bodied pit viper up to 2.5 m. Responsible for more snakebite deaths in Central America than any other species — "the ultimate pit viper".

The Danger

Highly potent hemotoxin causes catastrophic tissue damage and bleeding. Without antivenom, mortality reaches 7–9%. Aggressive when cornered.

Habitat

Lowland forests, plantations, banana fields from southern Mexico through Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Active hunter at night; sometimes climbs into low vegetation. Females give birth to up to 80 venomous neonates.

FIG. 02 Reptile
№ 02 / 11
Reptile · Viperidae

Bushmaster

Lachesis muta
Threat Level
Largest pit viper in the world
Description

Largest pit viper in the world — up to 3.7 m. Reddish-brown with diamond pattern. Known by Spanish name 'verrugosa' or local 'matabuey' ("ox-killer").

The Danger

Massive venom yield. Without antivenom, mortality up to 80%. Rare encounters because it lives deep in untouched forest, but bites are catastrophic.

Habitat

Pristine tropical rainforests of Costa Rica, Panama, and the Amazon basin (Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru).

Behavior & Lifestyle

Solitary, nocturnal. Lays eggs (unusual for pit vipers — most give live birth). Vibrates tail like rattlesnake when threatened.

FIG. 03 Reptile
№ 03 / 11
Reptile · Viperidae

South American Rattlesnake

Crotalus durissus
Threat Level
Neurotoxic — unlike US rattlers
Description

Up to 1.8 m. The widest-ranging rattlesnake in South America. Unique among rattlers for highly neurotoxic venom (most have hemotoxic).

The Danger

Neurotoxin causes paralysis, blindness, kidney failure. Mortality up to 12% without antivenom — much higher than US rattlers. About 1,000 bites/year in Brazil.

Habitat

Dry savannas, Cerrado, and Caatinga of Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, Colombia, Venezuela.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal in hot weather. Often near villages and farms hunting rodents. Rattles loudly before striking — but doesn't always.

FIG. 04 Arachnid
№ 04 / 11
Arachnid · Ctenidae

Brazilian Wandering Spider

Phoneutria nigriventer
Threat Level
Most venomous spider in the world
Description

Up to 17 cm leg span. Holds Guinness record for most venomous spider. Brown with banded legs; raises front legs in defense.

The Danger

Neurotoxin causes intense pain, paralysis, suffocation, and (in 1% of cases) death. About 4,000 bites per year in Brazil alone. Hides in banana shipments — found in Europe and US in shops.

Habitat

Forests of Brazil, Paraguay, northern Argentina, Uruguay, eastern Bolivia. Wanders at night looking for prey — hence the name.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Doesn't build webs. Active at night. Often hides in bananas, shoes, woodpiles, inside houses. Female aggressively defends egg sac.

FIG. 05 Reptile
№ 05 / 11
Reptile · Alligatoridae

Black Caiman

Melanosuchus niger
Threat Level
Largest predator in Amazon
Description

Largest predator in the Amazon — up to 6 m and 500 kg. The only crocodilian to actively hunt humans in South America.

The Danger

Aggressive and territorial. Attacks documented every year in Brazil, Peru, Bolivia. Excellent night hunter using infrared-sensitive eyes. Attacks fishermen pulling nets, swimmers.

Habitat

Amazon basin — Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana. Slow rivers, oxbow lakes, flooded forests.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Apex predator. Hunts at night. Submerges with only nostrils and eyes visible. Capable of taking jaguars and adult capybaras.

FIG. 06 Reptile
№ 06 / 11
Reptile · Boidae

Green Anaconda

Eunectes murinus
Threat Level
Heaviest snake on Earth
Description

Heaviest snake on Earth — up to 250 kg and 8 m. Olive-green with black blotches. Lives almost entirely in water in the Amazon basin.

The Danger

Constricts prey then swallows whole — capable of taking deer, capybaras, even caimans. Documented attacks on humans rare but fatal cases recorded. Drowning + crushing is the killing mechanism.

Habitat

Slow rivers, swamps, and flooded forests of the Amazon basin — Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly aquatic — only eyes and nostrils above water. Ambushes prey at the water's edge. Females eat males after mating.

FIG. 07 Mammal
№ 07 / 11
Mammal · Felidae

Jaguar

Panthera onca
Threat Level
Strongest bite of any cat
Description

Third-largest cat — up to 100 kg. Spotted rosettes with central dots distinguish it from leopards. In North America found in Mexico and rarely Arizona/New Mexico.

The Danger

Strongest bite force of any cat — pierces turtle shells and skulls. Attacks on humans rare but occur in Mexican rainforests.

Habitat

Tropical rainforests of southern Mexico (Chiapas, Yucatán), Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama; rare strays into Arizona.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Solitary, mostly nocturnal. Excellent swimmer — hunts caimans, capybaras, deer. Stalks before pouncing.

FIG. 08 Mammal
№ 08 / 11
Mammal · Phyllostomidae

Common Vampire Bat

Desmodus rotundus
Threat Level
Spreads rabies — major Amazon threat
Description

Small bat (7–9 cm, 25–40 g) that feeds exclusively on blood. Razor-sharp incisors slice skin painlessly; anticoagulant saliva keeps blood flowing.

The Danger

Top vector of rabies in Latin America — particularly the Amazon. Several outbreaks per year kill dozens. 2005 Brazilian outbreak killed 23. Cattle deaths cost millions.

Habitat

From Mexico to northern Argentina — caves, hollow trees, abandoned buildings. Most active in Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Active 30 minutes after sunset. Approaches sleeping victims (humans, cattle) silently. Bite is so light victim doesn't wake — discovered next morning.

FIG. 09 Fish
№ 09 / 11
Fish · Galeocerdonidae

Tiger Shark

Galeocerdo cuvier
Threat Level
Garbage can of the sea
Description

Up to 5 m with vertical tiger-like stripes (fade with age). Eats almost anything — license plates, tires, and human remains have been found in their stomachs.

The Danger

Second only to great white in unprovoked human attacks. Common in Caribbean and Hawaiian waters. Slow but powerful — strikes once and waits.

Habitat

Tropical and subtropical waters — Florida, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, Hawaii.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Solitary, mostly nocturnal. Migrates long distances. Females birth up to 80 live pups.

FIG. 10 Reptile
№ 10 / 11
Reptile · Viperidae

Eyelash Viper

Bothriechis schlegelii
Threat Level
Arboreal ambush predator
Description

Small (up to 80 cm), brilliantly colored pit viper — yellow, green, brown, or pink. Famous for raised scales above the eyes resembling eyelashes.

The Danger

Hemotoxic venom causes severe local damage. Bites are dangerous but rarely fatal due to small size. Often bites pickers and tourists who don't notice it on branches.

Habitat

Tropical rainforests of southern Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama, and northern South America.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Almost entirely arboreal. Hangs from branches and ambushes hummingbirds, lizards, frogs. Hides on banana stalks — picked up with fruit.

FIG. 11 Arthropod
№ 11 / 11
Arthropod · Scolopendridae

Amazonian Giant Centipede

Scolopendra gigantea
Threat Level
Largest centipede in the world
Description

Largest centipede on Earth — up to 30 cm. Reddish-brown with yellow legs. Found across northern South America.

The Danger

Bite injects highly toxic venom causing severe pain, swelling, fever, vomiting. One confirmed death — a 4-year-old child in Venezuela. Hunts bats, lizards, snakes, mice.

Habitat

Tropical rainforests of Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil, Peru, French Guiana, plus Trinidad. Hides under logs, in caves.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Hangs from cave ceilings to catch bats mid-flight. Aggressive when handled — bites with venomous front legs.