LETHAL FAUNA · VOL. I Indonesia
— Territory Dossier —

🇮🇩 Indonesia

17,000 islands of dragons, sharks, and snakes — most biodiverse Asian country
Komodo
Largest lizard on Earth
Saltwater
Croc — biggest reptile
Reef
Box jelly, stonefish
FIG. 01 Reptile
№ 01 / 20
Reptile · Elapidae

King Cobra

Ophiophagus hannah
Threat Level
Longest venomous snake on Earth
Description

Longest venomous snake in the world — up to 5.5 m. Olive-green to brown with chevron markings. Only snake that builds a nest for its eggs.

The Danger

One bite delivers enough neurotoxin to kill 20 humans or an Asian elephant. Causes respiratory paralysis within 30 minutes. Antivenom essential. Mortality without treatment: ~60%.

Habitat

Forests, mangroves, agricultural areas of India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Diurnal. Hunts other snakes (genus name means 'snake-eater'). Rears up to 1/3 of body length when threatened and makes a low growl-like hiss.

FIG. 02 Reptile
№ 02 / 20
Reptile · Crocodylidae

Saltwater Crocodile (Saltie)

Crocodylus porosus
Threat Level
Largest reptile predator on Earth
Description

Largest living reptile — males up to 7 m and 1,000 kg. Olive-grey. Strongest bite force ever measured (3,700 psi). The world's most prolific man-eater.

The Danger

Kills ~1,000 people per year worldwide — more than sharks, lions, and tigers combined. Active hunter of humans. About 1-2 deaths/year in Australia, dozens in Indonesia/PNG/Solomon Islands.

Habitat

Tropical coasts and rivers from India through SE Asia, northern Australia, PNG, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji (rarely).

Behavior & Lifestyle

Ambush hunter — explodes from water to grab prey at water's edge. Death roll drowns large prey. Travels 1,000+ km along coasts via ocean currents.

FIG. 03 Cnidarian
№ 03 / 20
Cnidarian · Chirodropidae

Box Jellyfish (Sea Wasp)

Chironex fleckeri
Threat Level
Most venomous marine animal — kills in minutes
Description

Cube-shaped bell up to 30 cm with up to 60 tentacles trailing 3 m. Pale blue, almost invisible in water. Active swimmer (most jellyfish drift).

The Danger

Most venomous marine animal — sting causes cardiac arrest within 2-5 minutes. ~80 deaths recorded in Australia, ~40 per year in Philippines. Vinegar must be applied immediately.

Habitat

Coastal waters of northern Australia (October-May 'stinger season'), Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Has 24 eyes — can see and navigate. Hunts shrimp in shallow water near beaches. Lives only ~3 months but can sting even when washed up dead.

FIG. 04 Mollusc
№ 04 / 20
Mollusc · Octopodidae

Blue-Ringed Octopus

Hapalochlaena lunulata
Threat Level
No antivenom exists
Description

Tiny — only 12-20 cm tip-to-tip. Yellow-brown with bright blue rings that pulse vividly when threatened. Looks adorable. Is lethal.

The Danger

Tetrodotoxin (same as pufferfish) — 1,000x more potent than cyanide. One bite paralyzes adults; victim conscious but can't breathe. No antivenom. Treatment: artificial respiration for 24+ hours until toxin clears.

Habitat

Tide pools and coral reefs of Australia, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, Philippines, Solomon Islands.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Hides in shells, bottles, debris. Bite is painless — victim may not realize until paralysis begins minutes later. Picked up by tourists curious about color.

FIG. 05 Fish
№ 05 / 20
Fish · Synanceiidae

Estuarine Stonefish

Synanceia horrida
Threat Level
Most venomous fish — equal to Reef stonefish
Description

Up to 60 cm. Mottled brown — perfect camouflage as a rock or piece of coral. 13 dorsal spines deliver deadly venom on contact. Asian counterpart of the Australian reef stonefish.

The Danger

Excruciating pain often described as the worst known. Without antivenom, large stings can be fatal in hours from cardiovascular collapse. Several deaths/year across Asia.

Habitat

Estuaries, mangroves, shallow tidal pools of India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Indonesia, Philippines.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Lies motionless half-buried in sand/mud. Hunters often step on them while wading or fishing barefoot.

FIG. 06 Mollusc
№ 06 / 20
Mollusc · Conidae

Geographic Cone Snail

Conus geographus
Threat Level
30% mortality, no antivenom
Description

Beautiful patterned shell 10-15 cm long. The most venomous of all cone snails. Hunts fish with a venomous harpoon-like tooth fired from a proboscis.

The Danger

Conotoxin causes total paralysis with no antidote — mortality ~30%. Victims describe being conscious but unable to move or breathe. Patients survived by being put on ventilators until toxin cleared.

Habitat

Coral reefs and sandy areas of tropical Indo-Pacific — Australia, PNG, Indonesia, Philippines, all Pacific islands.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Slow-moving but hunts fish (!) by harpooning them with a tooth shot at high speed. Tourists picking up the pretty shell get stung.

FIG. 07 Mammal
№ 07 / 20
Mammal · Elephantidae

Asian Elephant

Elephas maximus
Threat Level
Kills more humans than any wild mammal
Description

Up to 5 tons. Smaller than African elephant; ears like India's shape. Despite being icons of Buddhist/Hindu reverence, kill more humans per year than tigers and lions combined.

The Danger

About 500 deaths/year in India alone. 'Bull elephants in musth' (hormonal frenzy) are exceptionally dangerous. Crop-raiding leads to confrontations. Tramples or gores with tusks.

Habitat

India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Indonesia (Sumatra, Borneo).

Behavior & Lifestyle

Matriarchal herds of cows + calves; bulls solitary. Highly intelligent — remember faces, hold grudges. Charge at 40 km/h.

FIG. 08 Insect
№ 08 / 20
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. 09 Insect
№ 09 / 20
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. 10 Cnidarian
№ 10 / 20
Cnidarian · Carukiidae

Irukandji Jellyfish

Malo kingi
Threat Level
Tiny but potentially deadly
Description

Tiny box jellyfish — bell only 1-2 cm. 4 tentacles up to 1 m. Causes 'Irukandji syndrome' 20-30 minutes after the (often unfelt) sting.

The Danger

Symptoms: severe lower back pain, vomiting, sense of impending doom, hypertension, pulmonary edema. Documented deaths in Thailand, Philippines, Japan, Malaysia. ICU treatment.

Habitat

Warm Indo-Pacific waters — Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, southern Japan, increasingly common with ocean warming.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nearly invisible in water. Drifts in coastal blooms during summer monsoon. Stings even after death.

FIG. 11 Reptile
№ 11 / 20
Reptile · Elapidae

Philippine Cobra

Naja philippinensis
Threat Level
Most toxic spitting cobra
Description

Up to 1.6 m, light brown. Endemic to the northern Philippines. Has the most neurotoxic venom of any cobra and can spit venom up to 3 metres into eyes.

The Danger

Pure neurotoxin — death from respiratory failure in 30 minutes. Spit venom causes severe eye damage, possible blindness if not flushed immediately.

Habitat

Endemic to northern Philippines — Luzon, Catanduanes, Mindoro, Masbate. Rice paddies, farmland, freshwater habitats.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Diurnal. Spreads hood when threatened and spits with accuracy. Strikes 20-30% of cobra bites in Philippines are fatal without antivenom.

FIG. 12 Reptile
№ 12 / 20
Reptile · Elapidae

Many-Banded Krait

Bungarus multicinctus
Threat Level
Most lethal land snake in China
Description

Up to 1.5 m. Glossy black with 20-50 white bands. Causes most snakebite deaths in southern China, Taiwan, northern Vietnam, Myanmar.

The Danger

Most toxic land snake venom in Asia after taipan. Bite is often painless — symptoms begin hours later with paralysis. Without antivenom mortality 50%. Steve Irwin's contemporary Joe Slowinski died from a captive bite in 2001.

Habitat

Southern China (south of Yangtze), Taiwan, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar. Open countryside, near water, occasionally enters houses.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Strictly nocturnal. Shy by day. Often crawls into bedding. Many bites occur during sleep — victims wake paralyzed.

FIG. 13 Reptile
№ 13 / 20
Reptile · Viperidae

Malayan Pit Viper

Calloselasma rhodostoma
Threat Level
Most snake bites in Southeast Asia
Description

Up to 1 m. Reddish-brown with triangular markings. The most common venomous snake in Thailand, Malaysia, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam.

The Danger

Causes most snakebites in Southeast Asia. Hemotoxin causes severe tissue necrosis — often requires amputation. Mortality 2% with antivenom. Used in research to develop anti-stroke drug 'Ancrod'.

Habitat

Plantations, forests, rice paddies of Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia (Sumatra, Java).

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly nocturnal. Lies motionless on leaf litter — perfect camouflage. Often bitten by rubber plantation workers.

FIG. 14 Mammal
№ 14 / 20
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. 15 Reptile
№ 15 / 20
Reptile · Elapidae

Yellow-Bellied Sea Snake

Hydrophis platurus
Threat Level
Pelagic sea snake — open ocean
Description

Black above, bright yellow below, paddle-shaped tail. Up to 1 m. The most widespread snake in the world — Indo-Pacific from Africa to Americas.

The Danger

Highly potent neurotoxin — 10x more toxic than cobra. But docile and rarely bites swimmers. Most bites: fishermen entangled in nets.

Habitat

Open ocean throughout Indo-Pacific — Australia, all Oceania islands, Indonesia, Philippines, India, even Pacific coast of Mexico/Central America.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Fully aquatic — cannot move well on land. Drinks fresh water from surface rain layer. Floats among debris hunting small fish.

FIG. 16 Mammal
№ 16 / 20
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. 17 Fish
№ 17 / 20
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. 18 Fish
№ 18 / 20
Fish · Carcharhinidae

Bull Shark

Carcharhinus leucas
Threat Level
Most dangerous shark in NA waters
Description

Stocky, aggressive shark up to 3.5 m. Uniquely tolerant of fresh water — found in Mississippi, Amazon, even Lake Nicaragua.

The Danger

Top contender for most dangerous shark to humans. Hunts in shallow, murky water — exactly where people swim. Many attacks attributed to 'great whites' are actually bull sharks.

Habitat

Shallow coastal waters, estuaries, rivers — Florida, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean (Cuba, Bahamas, DR), Lake Nicaragua, Mississippi River, Pacific coasts of Mexico and Central America.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Aggressive and territorial. Tolerates salinity from 0 to 53 ppt. Attacks unprovoked more than other sharks.

FIG. 19 Reptile
№ 19 / 20
Reptile · Varanidae

Komodo Dragon

Varanus komodoensis
Threat Level
Largest lizard on Earth
Description

Largest living lizard — up to 3 m and 70 kg. Endemic to a handful of Indonesian islands. Hunts deer, water buffalo, and occasionally humans.

The Danger

Combination of serrated teeth and venomous bite (anticoagulants + shock-inducing toxins) causes massive bleeding. Documented human fatalities — most recent 2007, 2009. Patient locals fear them more than tigers.

Habitat

Endemic to 5 Indonesian islands — Komodo, Rinca, Padar, Gili Motang, Flores. Tropical dry forest and savanna.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Apex predator. Ambushes from cover. Tracks wounded prey for kilometers. Cannibalistic — adults eat juveniles. Females can reproduce parthenogenetically.

FIG. 20 Arthropod
№ 20 / 20
Arthropod · Scolopendridae

Asian Giant Centipede

Scolopendra subspinipes
Threat Level
Most widespread giant centipede
Description

Up to 20 cm. Reddish-brown body, yellow legs. Most widespread of the giant centipedes — found across South Asia, Southeast Asia, parts of Africa and Pacific.

The Danger

Bite causes intense pain (worse than wasp), swelling, fever, occasionally cardiac issues. One documented death of a child in the Philippines. Bites common in agricultural workers.

Habitat

Tropical and subtropical regions — Hawaii, all SE Asia, India, southern China, Indonesia, Philippines, parts of Africa.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal predator. Hunts insects, mice, frogs, even bats. Hides in damp dark places. Often found in houses.