LETHAL FAUNA Nepal
— Territory Dossier —

🇳🇵 Nepal

Himalayan snow leopards above, Terai tigers below
1,000
Snake deaths per year
Terai
Bengal tigers + rhinos
Everest
Snow leopards
FIG. 01 Reptile
№ 01 / 11
Reptile · Viperidae

Russell's Viper

Daboia russelii
Threat Level
Most human deaths of any snake
Description

Up to 1.7 m. Brown with characteristic three rows of dark oval blotches. Considered the deadliest snake species by human mortality — causes the most deaths of any snake worldwide.

The Danger

Hemotoxic venom causes massive bleeding, kidney failure, pituitary damage ('Sheehan-like syndrome'). Kills ~30,000 people per year in India alone.

Habitat

Open grasslands, scrub forests, farmland across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, southern China, Taiwan.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly nocturnal. Hisses loudly when threatened — louder than any other snake. Coiled tight in S-shape, strikes with explosive speed.

FIG. 02 Reptile
№ 02 / 11
Reptile · Elapidae

Common Krait

Bungarus caeruleus
Threat Level
Bites sleeping people — 'silent killer'
Description

Glossy black with white bands. Up to 1.7 m. The 'silent killer' — nocturnal, often enters huts and bites sleeping people. Bite is so light victim may not wake.

The Danger

Most potent neurotoxin of any Indian snake — 15x stronger than cobra venom. Victims paralyzed and stop breathing in their sleep. India: ~10,000 fatalities/year. Mortality without antivenom: 70-80%.

Habitat

Across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal. Termite mounds, rat burrows, low-lying agricultural areas, rural homes.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Drawn to body heat — enters huts, climbs into beds. Bite may go unnoticed until paralysis sets in hours later.

FIG. 03 Reptile
№ 03 / 11
Reptile · Elapidae

Indian Spectacled Cobra

Naja naja
Threat Level
Part of India's deadly Big Four
Description

Up to 2.2 m with iconic 'spectacles' marking on the hood. One of India's 'Big Four' — four snakes causing most snakebite deaths. The classic snake-charmer cobra.

The Danger

Powerful neurotoxin + cardiotoxin. Without antivenom, mortality 15-20%. India sees ~10,000 cobra bites/year contributing to 58,000+ snake death total.

Habitat

Across the Indian subcontinent — India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal. Common in agricultural areas, villages, near water.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly nocturnal in hot regions. Spreads hood and rears up when threatened. Strikes with high accuracy.

FIG. 04 Reptile
№ 04 / 11
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. 05 Mammal
№ 05 / 11
Mammal · Felidae

Bengal Tiger

Panthera tigris tigris
Threat Level
Apex predator — historically thousands of victims
Description

Largest cat in the world — males up to 250 kg. Orange with black stripes (each pattern unique). India holds ~70% of world tiger population (~3,000 left).

The Danger

Historical man-eaters killed 1,000+ in some regions. Today ~85 deaths/year in India + Bangladesh, mostly in Sundarbans mangrove forest. Champawat Tigress killed 436 before being shot in 1907.

Habitat

Sundarbans (Bangladesh+India), Indian central forests, Nepal Terai, Bhutan. Mangrove, grassland, deciduous forest.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Solitary, mostly nocturnal. Ambush from cover. Can leap 10 m horizontally. Once it tastes human, often becomes a man-eater.

FIG. 06 Mammal
№ 06 / 11
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. 07 Insect
№ 07 / 11
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. 08 Mammal
№ 08 / 11
Mammal · Canidae

Domestic Dog (Rabies)

Canis familiaris
Threat Level
59,000 human deaths per year worldwide
Description

The most lethal mammal to humans on Earth — not by attacks alone, but through rabies. 59,000 people die from dog-mediated rabies annually, 99% of all rabies deaths. Half are children under 15.

The Danger

Two threats: (1) physical attacks — 4.5M bites per year in US alone, ~70 fatalities; (2) rabies via bite — almost 100% fatal once symptoms appear. Vaccine works only before symptoms.

Habitat

Worldwide. Highest rabies burden in India, Africa, Southeast Asia. US, Canada, Mexico, Western Europe, Australia: dog rabies eliminated.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Stray and unvaccinated dogs are the main reservoir. Children most vulnerable due to height and inability to defend themselves.

FIG. 09 Mammal
№ 09 / 11
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. 10 Mammal
№ 10 / 11
Mammal · Ursidae

Sloth Bear

Melursus ursinus
Threat Level
Most dangerous bear in India
Description

Shaggy black with prominent muzzle and white V on chest. Up to 145 kg. The most dangerous bear in India — small but extremely aggressive.

The Danger

Causes most bear-related deaths in India (~50+/year). 'Mauling specialist' — uses front paws to swipe at face. Poor eyesight means it attacks reflexively when startled.

Habitat

Forests of India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Bangladesh. Especially central India (Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh).

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Feeds on termites — sucks them up with a vacuum-like mouth. Carries cubs on back. Defensive, not predatory toward humans.

FIG. 11 Reptile
№ 11 / 11
Reptile · Crocodylidae

Mugger Crocodile

Crocodylus palustris
Threat Level
Indian freshwater apex predator
Description

Up to 5 m. Olive-brown, broad snout. India's main freshwater croc. The name 'mugger' comes from Hindi 'magar' meaning crocodile (not the assault meaning).

The Danger

Causes 20-30 deaths/year in India and Sri Lanka. Attacks people bathing, fishing, doing laundry at riverside. Aggressive especially during nesting.

Habitat

Freshwater rivers, lakes, marshes of India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, southern Iran.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Aestivates during dry season in burrows. Mostly nocturnal hunter. Females fiercely defend nests within 100 m radius.