LETHAL FAUNA · VOL. I Jordan
— Territory Dossier —

🇯🇴 Jordan

Desert kingdom — deathstalker scorpions in vast wadis
Deathstalker
Most venomous scorpion
Wadi Rum
Desert fauna
Aqaba
Red Sea reef
FIG. 01 Arachnid
№ 01 / 10
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. 02 Arachnid
№ 02 / 10
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. 03 Reptile
№ 03 / 10
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. 04 Fish
№ 04 / 10
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. 05 Reptile
№ 05 / 10
Reptile · Viperidae

Palestine Viper

Daboia palaestinae
Threat Level
Most dangerous snake in Israel
Description

Up to 1.3 m. Grey-brown with darker zigzag. Israel's national reptile and main cause of envenomation in the Levant.

The Danger

Hemotoxic venom causes severe local damage, hemorrhage, hypotension. About 200 bites/year in Israel. Mortality <1% with antivenom; previously 5-7%.

Habitat

Mediterranean coastal regions of Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, southern Turkey. Coastal plains, forest edges, agricultural land.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Crepuscular in summer. Often found in cultivated areas. Strikes when threatened — quick to defend itself.

FIG. 06 Reptile
№ 06 / 10
Reptile · Viperidae

Arabian Carpet Viper

Echis coloratus
Threat Level
Top killer in Arabian Peninsula
Description

Cousin of saw-scaled viper, up to 75 cm. Sandy-grey with darker pattern. Causes most snakebites in the Arabian Peninsula and Israel's southern deserts.

The Danger

Hemotoxin causes severe bleeding, kidney failure. Highly aggressive — strikes repeatedly. Number one cause of snakebite death in Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, UAE, southern Israel.

Habitat

Rocky deserts and mountain wadis of Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, UAE, southern Israel, Jordan, southern Egypt.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal in summer. Makes 'sizzling' warning sound by rubbing scales — same as African saw-scaled. Easily overlooked due to camouflage.

FIG. 07 Arachnid
№ 07 / 10
Arachnid · Sicariidae

Mediterranean Recluse

Loxosceles rufescens
Threat Level
Necrotic flesh-rotting venom
Description

Light brown spider 7-10 mm with a violin-shaped marking on the head. Six eyes (most spiders have eight). Increasingly common in southern European homes.

The Danger

Cytotoxic venom causes 'loxoscelism' — necrotic skin lesions that can rot for weeks. Confirmed deaths in Italy and Spain in recent years.

Habitat

Walls, attics, woodpiles, behind furniture in homes across Italy, Spain, Portugal, southern France, Greece, Croatia, Cyprus, Malta.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Reclusive — bites only when pressed against skin (e.g., in clothes or bedding). Active at night hunting other arthropods.

FIG. 08 Mammal
№ 08 / 10
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. 09 Arachnid
№ 09 / 10
Arachnid · Buthidae

Common Yellow Scorpion

Buthus occitanus
Threat Level
Painful but rarely lethal
Description

Yellow-brown, up to 8 cm. Found in Spain, southern France, Italy, the Balkans. The largest scorpion in Europe.

The Danger

Sting is intensely painful — comparable to a wasp — and can cause swelling, fever, vomiting. Healthy adults recover in 24 hours; risk for children and allergics.

Habitat

Dry rocky terrain, vineyards, ruins, and old stone walls of the Mediterranean.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Hides under stones and bark by day. Stings when stepped on, sat on, or while putting on shoes left outside overnight.

FIG. 10 Mammal
№ 10 / 10
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.