LETHAL FAUNA Spain
— Territory Dossier —

🇪🇸 Spain

Mediterranean coast, Pyrenees, and the orcas now sinking sailboats
5
Native viper species
370+
Brown bears in Cantabria
150,000
Jellyfish stings per year
FIG. 01 Arachnid
№ 01 / 17
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 Mammal
№ 02 / 17
Mammal · Ursidae

European Brown Bear

Ursus arctos arctos
Threat Level
Largest land predator
Description

Largest land predator in Europe. Males reach 350 kg. Mostly omnivorous; can outrun a horse over short distances and is an excellent swimmer and tree-climber when young.

The Danger

Attacks rare but documented — about 10 fatal attacks per decade across Europe. Most occur when surprising a sow with cubs or a wounded individual.

Habitat

Mountain forests of the Carpathians, Scandinavia, Balkans, Pyrenees, Alps, and Russian taiga.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Hibernates Nov–Mar in dens. Active at dawn and dusk. A sow defending cubs is the most dangerous scenario.

FIG. 03 Arachnid
№ 03 / 17
Arachnid · Ixodidae

Castor Bean Tick

Ixodes ricinus
Threat Level
Lyme disease and TBE vector
Description

Small, dark tick — the primary disease vector in Europe. Despite being only 3–4 mm, kills more Europeans annually than any other animal.

The Danger

Transmits Lyme borreliosis (200,000+ cases/year), tick-borne encephalitis (3,500+ cases/year, ~30 deaths), babesiosis, anaplasmosis. The TBE vaccine exists.

Habitat

Forests, parks, tall grass, urban green spaces. Most active April–June and September–October.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Quests on grass tips and twigs, latching on contact. Seeks warm, moist body sites. Feeds for 3–7 days before dropping off.

FIG. 04 Insect
№ 04 / 17
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. 05 Insect
№ 05 / 17
Insect · Culicidae

Common House Mosquito

Culex pipiens
Threat Level
West Nile virus carrier — 27 deaths in Italy 2025
Description

Brown mosquito 5–7 mm — the typical 'house mosquito' across Europe. Native, not invasive — but increasingly dangerous as warming climate amplifies disease cycles.

The Danger

Primary vector of West Nile virus in Europe. Italy alone logged 430 WNV cases and 27 deaths in summer 2025 — equal to all US cases for that year. Spain, Greece, France, Romania, Hungary all reporting outbreaks.

Habitat

All of Europe except the far Arctic. Breeds in any standing water — gutters, water butts, flooded basements, urban drains.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Bites mostly at dusk and night. Females hibernate in basements/attics through winter. The lifecycle from egg to adult takes only 7–10 days in summer.

FIG. 06 Arachnid
№ 06 / 17
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. 07 Insect
№ 07 / 17
Insect · Vespidae

Asian Hornet

Vespa velutina
Threat Level
Invasive species since 2004
Description

Smaller and darker than European hornet, with yellow legs. Invaded Europe via France in 2004 and now spread across France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, UK, Germany, Belgium.

The Danger

Highly aggressive when nests are disturbed. Several confirmed deaths in France and Spain from anaphylactic shock. Devastating to honey bee colonies — kills up to 50 bees per day per hornet.

Habitat

Builds large nests high in trees — often only spotted in autumn when leaves fall.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Hovers in front of beehives picking off returning bees. Defends its nest aggressively at 5 m distance — silent, fast, persistent.

FIG. 08 Reptile
№ 08 / 17
Reptile · Viperidae

Iberian Viper

Vipera seoanei
Threat Level
Iberian peninsula endemic
Description

Endemic to northern Spain and Portugal. Up to 75 cm. Variable colouration but typically grey-brown with darker zigzag.

The Danger

Hemotoxin causes pain and swelling. Bites uncommon — about 50 per year in Galicia, Asturias, northern Portugal. Antivenom available.

Habitat

Atlantic coastal forests, mountain meadows, and pastures of northwestern Iberia.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Cool-climate adapted. Active by day in spring and autumn. Often seen basking on stone walls and dry-stone field boundaries.

FIG. 09 Reptile
№ 09 / 17
Reptile · Viperidae

Asp Viper

Vipera aspis
Threat Level
Most snakebites in France and Italy
Description

Up to 75 cm with an upturned snout. Causes the majority of snakebites in France, Switzerland, and northern Italy — about 1,000 envenomations annually.

The Danger

Venom is more potent than the common viper. About 4% of untreated bites are fatal. Severe tissue damage common; victims often need months of recovery.

Habitat

Sun-warmed slopes, dry meadows, vineyards, and forest edges in southwestern Europe.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Less retiring than common viper. Strikes with little warning when stepped on or grabbed. Mating in spring; gives birth to live young.

FIG. 10 Mammal
№ 10 / 17
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. 11 Insect
№ 11 / 17
Insect · Psychodidae

Sandfly

Phlebotomus papatasi
Threat Level
Carries leishmaniasis — flesh-eating skin disease
Description

Tiny (2–3 mm) hairy fly that looks like a fuzzy mosquito. Active at dusk in Mediterranean coasts. Despite size, vectors a horrifying parasitic disease.

The Danger

Transmits Leishmania parasites causing leishmaniasis: cutaneous form creates flesh-eating skin ulcers; visceral form (kala-azar) attacks organs and kills if untreated. Several thousand cases per year in Mediterranean Europe.

Habitat

Mediterranean coast — Spain, Portugal, southern France, Italy, Greece, Croatia, Albania, Cyprus, Malta. Hides in cracks, animal burrows, rubbish.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Silent flight — no buzz like a mosquito. Bites at dusk and dawn. Cannot fly far so spreads disease by hopping between hosts in close range.

FIG. 12 Cnidarian
№ 12 / 17
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. 13 Arachnid
№ 13 / 17
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. 14 Fish
№ 14 / 17
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. 15 Mammal
№ 15 / 17
Mammal · Delphinidae

Orca (Killer Whale)

Orcinus orca
Threat Level
Recently sinking boats off Iberia
Description

Largest dolphin — up to 9 m and 6 tons. Apex predator of the oceans. Since 2020, a pod off Iberia has been deliberately ramming and sinking sailboats.

The Danger

No fatal attacks on humans in the wild ever recorded — but as of 2024, over 700 boat ramming incidents and 4 sailboats sunk off Spain and Portugal. Direct human risk: drowning during shipwreck.

Habitat

All European waters — Atlantic, Bay of Biscay, Mediterranean (rare), Norwegian Sea, North Sea. Iberian pod active off Spain, Portugal.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Highly intelligent, social — pods of 5-30. Teach each other behaviours culturally. The boat-ramming is being learned by new generations.

FIG. 16 Arthropod
№ 16 / 17
Arthropod · Scolopendridae

Mediterranean Banded Centipede

Scolopendra cingulata
Threat Level
Largest centipede in Europe
Description

Up to 17 cm long. Yellow-orange body with dark bands. The largest centipede native to Europe, found across the Mediterranean.

The Danger

Bite delivers venom via modified front legs (forcipules) — extremely painful, causes swelling, fever, occasionally vomiting. Not fatal but agonizing.

Habitat

Under stones, logs, leaf litter across Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, France (south), Croatia, Cyprus, Malta, southern Ukraine, Crimea.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Nocturnal predator hunting insects, spiders, even small lizards. Aggressive when handled — flips and grabs with multiple legs.

FIG. 17 Arachnid
№ 17 / 17
Arachnid · Lycosidae

Iberian Tarantula

Lycosa tarantula
Threat Level
Original 'tarantula' from Taranto, Italy
Description

Large wolf spider up to 30 cm leg span. Despite its fearsome reputation that gave the name to all 'tarantulas', its venom is mild. Found in Iberia and southern Italy.

The Danger

Bite is painful — like a wasp sting — and may cause inflammation. Medieval legends of 'tarantism' (frenzied dancing) were exaggerated. No deaths recorded.

Habitat

Dry grasslands, scrubland, vineyards of Spain, Portugal, southern France, southern Italy. Lives in burrows up to 30 cm deep.

Behavior & Lifestyle

Hunting ground spider — does not spin webs. Females carry egg sacs and later young on their backs. Active at night.