LETHAL FAUNA South Africa
— Territory Dossier —

🇿🇦 South Africa

Kruger, Cape Town, and great white sharks — Africa's deadliest gathering
Kruger
Big Five park
Gansbaai
Great white capital
Kalahari
Six-eyed sand spiders
FIG. 01 Reptile
№ 01 / 22
Reptile · Elapidae

Black Mamba

Dendroaspis polylepis
Threat Level
Fastest snake — kills in 20 minutes
Description

Up to 4.5 m — Africa's longest venomous snake. Body is brown-grey; only mouth interior is black (hence the name).

The Danger

Most feared snake in Africa. Pure neurotoxin kills in 20 minutes to 7 hours without antivenom. Mortality 100% without treatment. Strikes multiple times.

Habitat

Savannas, rocky hills, woodlands of sub-Saharan Africa — Senegal to South Africa, especially Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya, Zambia, Malawi.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Diurnal. Fastest snake on Earth — 20 km/h. Climbs trees and termite mounds. Aggressive when cornered — rears up to face height.

FIG. 02 Mammal
№ 02 / 22
Mammal · Bovidae

Cape Buffalo

Syncerus caffer
Threat Level
'Black death' — 200+ deaths/year
Description

Up to 900 kg. Massive curved horns. Known as 'the widowmaker' — most dangerous of Africa's Big Five for hunters.

The Danger

Kills 200+ people per year. Wounded buffaloes are legendary for ambushing pursuers. Stampedes are deadly. Aggressive, unpredictable, holds grudges.

Habitat

Savannas and swamps of sub-Saharan Africa — Tanzania, Kenya, Zambia, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia, Uganda.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Lives in herds of 50-500. Bachelor groups of old bulls ('dagga boys') most dangerous. Excellent memory — circles back to attack hunters.

FIG. 03 Mammal
№ 03 / 22
Mammal · Felidae

Lion

Panthera leo
Threat Level
Apex predator — 100+ deaths per year
Description

Up to 250 kg. King of African savannas. Only social big cat — lives in prides of 10-40. Population: ~23,000 in the wild.

The Danger

About 100-200 fatal attacks per year. Famous Tsavo man-eaters killed 135 in 1898. Old, injured, or starving lions become man-eaters. Hunts mostly between dusk and dawn.

Habitat

Savannas and grasslands of sub-Saharan Africa — Tanzania (Serengeti), Kenya (Masai Mara), South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Pride lives together; lionesses hunt cooperatively. Males defend territory. Roars heard 8 km away. Adult males eat 7 kg meat per day.

FIG. 04 Mammal
№ 04 / 22
Mammal · Elephantidae

African Bush Elephant

Loxodonta africana
Threat Level
Largest land animal — 500 deaths/year
Description

Largest land mammal on Earth — males up to 6 tonnes. Larger than Asian elephant; both sexes have tusks. Population ~400,000.

The Danger

Kills ~500 people per year across Africa. Bulls in musth extremely dangerous. Crop-raiding leads to conflicts. Crushes or impales with tusks.

Habitat

Savannas, forests, deserts of sub-Saharan Africa — Botswana, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa, Namibia.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Matriarchal herds. Highly intelligent — remember individual humans for decades. Charge at 40 km/h. Silent despite massive size.

FIG. 05 Mammal
№ 05 / 22
Mammal · Rhinocerotidae

Black Rhinoceros

Diceros bicornis
Threat Level
Most aggressive rhino species
Description

Up to 1,400 kg. Smaller, hook-lipped browser. Critically endangered — only ~6,000 left. More aggressive than white rhino.

The Danger

Most aggressive of all rhino species. Charges anything that moves — known to attack vehicles, trains, fires. Two horns deliver impalement wounds.

Habitat

Bushveld and dense scrubland of Namibia, South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Solitary, mostly nocturnal. Browses on shrubs. Poor eyesight — relies on hearing and smell. Charges unpredictably.

FIG. 06 Mammal
№ 06 / 22
Mammal · Hippopotamidae

Hippopotamus

Hippopotamus amphibius
Threat Level
Kills more humans in Africa than any mammal
Description

Up to 3,200 kg — Africa's most dangerous large mammal. Despite appearance of placid herbivore, kills about 500 people per year.

The Danger

Aggressive and territorial. Overturns boats, bites people in half with 60 cm canine teeth. Runs 30 km/h on land. Mothers with calves extremely dangerous.

Habitat

Rivers, lakes, swamps across sub-Saharan Africa — major populations in Botswana, Zambia, Uganda, Tanzania, Mozambique, Kenya, DRC.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Spends day in water, grazes on land at night. Territorial bulls patrol stretches of river. Yawning displays threat — not relaxation.

FIG. 07 Reptile
№ 07 / 22
Reptile · Crocodylidae

Nile Crocodile

Crocodylus niloticus
Threat Level
~750 human deaths per year
Description

Up to 6 m and 1,000 kg. Second-largest crocodile after the saltwater. Kills more humans than any other crocodile — ~750 per year.

The Danger

Ambushes people drawing water, washing clothes, swimming. Death roll drowns prey. Active near villages along the Nile and Zambezi basins.

Habitat

Rivers, lakes, swamps across sub-Saharan Africa — Egypt (south), Sudan, South Sudan, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique, DRC, all Nile basin.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Mostly nocturnal hunter. Spends day basking. Can sprint 22 km/h short bursts. Females defend nests fiercely.

FIG. 08 Reptile
№ 08 / 22
Reptile · Viperidae

Puff Adder

Bitis arietans
Threat Level
Most snakebite deaths in Africa
Description

Stocky viper up to 1.4 m. Tan with dark chevron pattern. Causes more snakebite deaths than any other African snake — its lethargy means people step on it.

The Danger

Cytotoxic venom causes massive tissue damage, often requires amputation. Without antivenom mortality 15-20%. Doesn't flee — relies on camouflage.

Habitat

Almost all of Africa except Sahara, rainforests, and desert tops. Most widespread venomous snake in Africa.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Sluggish ambush hunter. Hisses ('puffs') as warning. Strikes with unusually fast lateral motion. Active at night in hot regions.

FIG. 09 Fish
№ 09 / 22
Fish · Lamnidae

Great White Shark

Carcharodon carcharias
Threat Level
Most fatal shark attacks in Africa
Description

Up to 6 m. South Africa has one of the densest great white populations on Earth, particularly Gansbaai and False Bay.

The Danger

South Africa averages 1-2 fatal attacks per year. Famous breaching behavior — leaps fully out of water hunting seals near Cape Town.

Habitat

Cool coastal waters — South Africa (Western Cape, Eastern Cape), Mozambique. Migrates to Indian and Atlantic oceans.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Apex predator. Migrates thousands of km. Investigative bite often fatal due to size of teeth.

FIG. 10 Insect
№ 10 / 22
Insect · Culicidae

African Malaria Mosquito

Anopheles gambiae
Threat Level
608,000 malaria deaths/year — 96% in Africa
Description

5-9 mm mosquito. Most efficient malaria vector in the world. Africa carries 96% of global malaria burden — ~580,000 deaths per year, mostly children under 5.

The Danger

Malaria has killed more humans than any other disease in history. WHO estimates 263 million cases per year. P. falciparum (most lethal strain) kills children within days without treatment.

Habitat

Sub-Saharan Africa universally. Breeds in any standing water — puddles, rice paddies, hoof prints.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Bites at night (peak 22:00 - 04:00). Prefers humans over animals (unusual). One female bites 2-3 times per cycle, transferring parasites between hosts.

FIG. 11 Mammal
№ 11 / 22
Mammal · Canidae

Domestic Dog (Rabies)

Canis familiaris
Threat Level
21,000+ rabies deaths/year in Africa
Description

Africa carries about 36% of global rabies burden — 21,476 deaths per year, almost all transmitted by dog bites. Most victims are children under 15.

The Danger

Once rabies symptoms appear, mortality is near 100%. Post-exposure vaccination works only before symptoms. Stray dogs are main reservoir. Major problem in DRC, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Tanzania.

Habitat

Across all of Africa. Highest rabies burden: DRC, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya. Eradicated in: South Africa (urban), Egypt (mostly).

Behavior & Lifestyle

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

FIG. 12 Mammal
№ 12 / 22
Mammal · Felidae

African Leopard

Panthera pardus pardus
Threat Level
Silent stalker — attacks from above
Description

Up to 90 kg. Most adaptable big cat. Population ~700,000 across Africa. Pound for pound, the strongest big cat — drags 100 kg prey into trees.

The Danger

Stealthy night predator. Targets dogs and small livestock; occasionally children. Attacks rare in healthy population but old or injured leopards become man-eaters.

Habitat

Diverse — savanna, forest, mountain, desert. All of sub-Saharan Africa. The most widespread big cat in Africa.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Solitary, nocturnal. Climbs trees with ease. Drags prey up to safety from lions and hyenas. Rarely roars — uses sawing calls.

FIG. 13 Mammal
№ 13 / 22
Mammal · Hyaenidae

Spotted Hyena

Crocuta crocuta
Threat Level
Strongest bite force of any mammal
Description

Up to 85 kg. Strongest bite force of any mammal — crushes bones. Lives in clans of up to 80, ruled by females.

The Danger

Active hunter, not just scavenger. Attacks sleeping people in rural villages — particularly children. ~10 fatal attacks per year. Removes faces while victim sleeps.

Habitat

Savannas, deserts, mountains across sub-Saharan Africa — Tanzania, Kenya, Botswana, Ethiopia, Zambia, South Africa.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Matriarchal society. Active mostly at night. Communicates with 'laughing' calls heard 5 km away. Eats 14 kg meat in single sitting.

FIG. 14 Reptile
№ 14 / 22
Reptile · Colubridae

Boomslang

Dispholidus typus
Threat Level
Delayed lethal hemotoxin
Description

Up to 2 m. Bright green (males), olive-brown (females). 'Tree snake' in Afrikaans. The most venomous colubrid in the world.

The Danger

Hemotoxin disrupts blood clotting — causes bleeding from every orifice over 24-48 hours. Bite often painless initially. Herpetologist Karl Schmidt died documenting his own bite (1957).

Habitat

Trees and shrubs of sub-Saharan Africa — South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia, Kenya, Tanzania.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Arboreal, diurnal. Huge eyes — best vision of any African snake. Inflates throat to twice normal size in defensive display.

FIG. 15 Reptile
№ 15 / 22
Reptile · Elapidae

Mozambique Spitting Cobra

Naja mossambica
Threat Level
Spits venom 3 m into eyes
Description

Up to 1.5 m. Olive to grey-brown with pink belly. Most common cobra of southern Africa.

The Danger

Spits venom accurately at 3 m — targets eyes, can cause permanent blindness. Cytotoxic bites cause severe necrosis.

Habitat

Savannas of Mozambique, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, northern South Africa, Angola, Namibia.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Often enters huts at night looking for rodents — bites or spits at sleeping occupants. Plays dead when threatened.

FIG. 16 Fish
№ 16 / 22
Fish · Carcharhinidae

Bull Shark

Carcharhinus leucas
Threat Level
Swims up African rivers
Description

Stocky, aggressive shark up to 3.5 m. Uniquely tolerant of fresh water — found in the Zambezi 200 km inland, in Lake Nicaragua.

The Danger

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

Habitat

Coasts and rivers — South Africa (Indian Ocean), Mozambique (Zambezi), Egypt (Red Sea), Senegal, Ghana coast.

Behavior & Lifestyle

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

FIG. 17 Reptile
№ 17 / 22
Reptile · Elapidae

Rinkhals (Ring-necked Spitting Cobra)

Hemachatus haemachatus
Threat Level
Spits venom and feigns death
Description

Up to 1.5 m. Dark with ridged scales and white throat bands. Endemic to southern Africa. Not a true cobra but closely related.

The Danger

Spits venom up to 2.5 m into eyes, causing intense pain and possible blindness. Cytotoxic + neurotoxic bite. Famous for playing dead — flips over with mouth open.

Habitat

Grasslands and highlands of South Africa, Lesotho, Eswatini, Zimbabwe. Common on the Highveld.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Active by day and night. When threatened, rears up and spits; if that fails, feigns death convincingly. Gives live birth.

FIG. 18 Arachnid
№ 18 / 22
Arachnid · Buthidae

South African Fat-Tailed Scorpion

Parabuthus transvaalicus
Threat Level
Can spray venom — southern Africa's deadliest
Description

Large dark scorpion up to 15 cm with a thick tail. The most dangerous scorpion of southern Africa. Uniquely, can spray venom from its stinger.

The Danger

Potent neurotoxin causes severe pain, muscle spasms, breathing difficulty. Children at serious risk. Sprayed venom in eyes causes temporary blindness.

Habitat

Arid regions of South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique. Digs burrows in dry soil.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal. Hides in burrows by day. Highly defensive — raises tail and may spray when threatened. Glows under UV light.

FIG. 19 Arachnid
№ 19 / 22
Arachnid · Sicariidae

Six-Eyed Sand Spider

Hexophthalma hahni
Threat Level
Necrotic venom — no antivenom
Description

Crab-like spider 8-15 mm body. Buries in sand. Distant relative of recluse spider. Bites in laboratory tests caused massive tissue death.

The Danger

Lab tests show among most toxic spider venoms ever measured. Only 2 confirmed human bites — both fatal. Bites very rare due to camouflage and shy nature.

Habitat

Sandy deserts of southern Africa — Namibia, Botswana, South Africa (Kalahari, Namib), Angola, Zimbabwe.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Buries in sand, only eyes visible. Ambush hunter. Extremely shy — flees rather than attacks. Females eat males after mating.

FIG. 20 Reptile
№ 20 / 22
Reptile · Pythonidae

African Rock Python

Python sebae
Threat Level
Africa's largest snake — constrictor
Description

Up to 6 m — Africa's largest snake. Non-venomous constrictor. Powerful enough to kill and swallow antelope, and rarely, humans.

The Danger

Kills by constriction — suffocates prey. Documented fatal attacks on humans, including children. Bite from backward-curving teeth causes deep wounds even without constriction.

Habitat

Savannas, forests, near water across sub-Saharan Africa — from Senegal to Ethiopia, south to South Africa.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Ambush predator. Often near human settlements hunting rats and poultry. Females guard eggs. Can go months between meals after a large kill.

FIG. 21 Reptile
№ 21 / 22
Reptile · Varanidae

Nile Monitor

Varanus niloticus
Threat Level
Africa's largest lizard — powerful bite
Description

Up to 2.4 m — Africa's largest lizard. Olive-grey with yellow markings. Excellent swimmer and climber found near water across the continent.

The Danger

Sharp teeth and claws, powerful tail whip. Bite causes lacerations and infection risk from bacteria-laden mouth. Not venomous but defends itself fiercely.

Habitat

Rivers, lakes, swamps across sub-Saharan Africa and the Nile — Egypt, Sudan, Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, Nigeria, DRC, and most of the continent.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Diurnal. Raids crocodile nests for eggs. Climbs trees, swims well. Flees to water when threatened but will bite hard if cornered.

FIG. 22 Mammal
№ 22 / 22
Mammal · Canidae

African Wild Dog

Lycaon pictus
Threat Level
Efficient pack hunter — rarely targets humans
Description

Up to 36 kg. Mottled coat of black, tan, white — each unique. Endangered — only ~6,600 left. Africa's most efficient predator: 80% hunt success rate.

The Danger

Hunts in coordinated packs, disemboweling prey on the run. Attacks on humans extremely rare, but packs can be dangerous if cornered. Mostly a threat to livestock.

Habitat

Savannas and open plains of southern and eastern Africa — Botswana, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia, South Africa, Kenya, Namibia.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Highly social — packs of 6-20. Communicate by sneezes before a hunt. Roam huge territories. Most active at dawn and dusk.