LETHAL FAUNA Monaco
— Territory Dossier —

🇲🇨 Monaco

City-state — danger is mainly offshore
0
Native land predators
Aug
Peak jellyfish month
2
km² total area
FIG. 01 Arachnid
№ 01 / 07
Arachnid · Theridiidae

Mediterranean Black Widow

Latrodectus tredecimguttatus
Threat Level
Severe latrodectism
Description

Glossy black with 13 red spots on the back — hence its Italian name, malmignatte. Smaller than American black widow but with similar venom.

The Danger

Alpha-latrotoxin causes severe muscle spasms, abdominal cramping, hypertension, and sweating ('latrodectism'). Antivenom available; before its development, mortality was 4–5%.

Habitat

Dry steppes, vineyards, abandoned buildings, and stone piles across southern Europe and the Balkans.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Builds tangled webs near the ground. Female bites only when pressed against skin — typically when moving rocks or harvesting grapes.

FIG. 02 Insect
№ 02 / 07
Insect · Culicidae

Asian Tiger Mosquito

Aedes albopictus
Threat Level
Spreads dengue, chikungunya, Zika in Europe
Description

Black with silver-white stripes, 5–10 mm. Invasive species from Southeast Asia, arrived in Europe in 1979. Now established in 13 EU countries; with climate warming spreading north every year.

The Danger

Vector for dengue, chikungunya, Zika, West Nile, and yellow fever. France logged 228 locally-acquired chikungunya cases in summer 2025 alone — 7x previous 14-year total. Aggressive day-biter, unlike most other mosquitoes.

Habitat

Established in Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Croatia, Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovenia, Switzerland, southern Germany, Hungary. Spreading to Belgium, Netherlands, UK.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Bites by day (dawn and dusk peaks). Breeds in tiny pools of water — flowerpots, gutters, bottle caps. One female lays 100+ eggs per cycle.

FIG. 03 Cnidarian
№ 03 / 07
Cnidarian · Pelagiidae

Mauve Stinger Jellyfish

Pelagia noctiluca
Threat Level
Mediterranean swarms
Description

Small purple-pink jellyfish that forms huge swarms in the Mediterranean. Bell only 10 cm but tentacles extend up to 3 m.

The Danger

Sting causes intense burning pain, blistering, scarring lasting weeks. Allergic reactions can cause anaphylaxis. Closes beaches across Spain, France, Italy in summer.

Habitat

Open Mediterranean and Atlantic. Drifts inshore in summer with currents.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Bioluminescent — glows when disturbed at night. Stings even after death — washed-up bells on beaches remain active for hours.

FIG. 04 Fish
№ 04 / 07
Fish · Trachinidae

Lesser Weever Fish

Echiichthys vipera
Threat Level
Most venomous European fish
Description

Small sandy-brown fish — up to 15 cm — that buries itself in shallow sand with only its eyes and dorsal spine showing. Found at swimming depth.

The Danger

Stepping on it drives a venomous spine into the foot, causing severe pain for 2–24 hours. Rarely fatal but ER visits common — UK alone reports 1,000+ stings per year.

Habitat

Sandy shallows of the Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts of France, UK, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Italy.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Buries in sand at low tide. Strikes only defensively. Most stings occur on popular beaches in summer at low water.

FIG. 05 Fish
№ 05 / 07
Fish · Carcharhinidae

Blue Shark

Prionace glauca
Threat Level
Rare attacks documented
Description

Slender, deep-blue shark up to 3.8 m. The most commonly seen large shark in the Mediterranean and northeast Atlantic.

The Danger

Attacks on humans are rare but documented — about 13 fatal attacks worldwide. Will investigate divers and survivors of shipwrecks.

Habitat

Open ocean and coastal waters of the Atlantic, Bay of Biscay, and Mediterranean Sea.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Migratory and curious. Often investigates boats and divers. Aggressive only when food is present or in feeding frenzy.

FIG. 06 Arachnid
№ 06 / 07
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. 07 Echinoderm
№ 07 / 07
Echinoderm · Arbaciidae

Black Sea Urchin

Arbacia lixula
Threat Level
Painful spines, no venom
Description

Glossy black sea urchin with thick, sharp spines up to 3 cm. Common across Mediterranean rocky shorelines.

The Danger

Spines break off in skin and cause persistent pain, infection, and inflammation. Not life-threatening but extremely common cause of beach injuries.

Habitat

Rocky Mediterranean coastlines, especially in shallow tidal zones.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Grazes on algae at night. Wedges into rock crevices. Most injuries occur when swimmers step on submerged urchins.