Nature is beautiful, but it can also be deadly, and sometimes, just downright nasty. Here’s a list of ten horrible ways in which animals can kill you. There are many more, but I’m sure these would be enough to give anyone nightmares.

Electric eels are elongated, fresh water fish, native to the Amazon and Orinoco rivers in South America. They are not really eels, but a kind of knifefish (and related to catfish). They are among the deadliest denizens of the South American rivers. It has not one, but three specialized organs to produce electric currents strong enough (600 volts, sometimes more) to stun or kill an adult human. It is believed that many “unexplained” disappearances of people while swimming in the Amazon and Orinoco rivers, could be due to them being stunned by an electric eel and drowning, or even, dying because of the eel’s discharge itself. Many of these deaths are often blamed on attacks by predatory animals such as piranha or caiman.
The electric eel doesn’t eat human beings; it feeds on smaller fish, crabs and small mammals. It only attacks in self defense, and handling an electric eel or even entering the water wherever these fish are common should be avoided at all costs.

Pythons and boas (anacondas being a kind of boa) are not venomous. They have very sharp teeth to hold on to their prey, but they rely on constriction for the actual kill. This means, they coil around the victim (once they have secured it with their teeth) and squeeze so that the unfortunate animal doesn’t have any space to breathe. Every time the victim tries to inhale, the snake squeezes harder. This deadly “hug” is so powerful that even blood can’t flow. As a matter of fact, death comes usually because of cardiac arrest/stroke, and not asphyxia as was once believed.
Although some smaller snakes (such as king snakes and gopher snakes) use constriction to kill prey, pythons and anacondas are the best known constrictors, and the scariest, too, since these cold-blooded predators have been known to kill and eat humans once in a while.

Among large predatory animals, crocodiles are the ones that kill the greatest number of people every year. They are often said to be among the few animals that still see humans as perfectly suitable prey. To deal with large prey, crocodiles use the “death roll”. Called by some “the most powerful killing mechanism” of any animal, it consists of the crocodile holding its prey with its jaws (usually by the neck or a limb), dragging it to the water and spinning its entire body; this is usually enough to dismember the unfortunate victim. They can do this on dry land as well.
The scariest part is that the crocodile really doesn’t care if the prey is alive or dead when it starts feeding; by doing a death-roll, it is really trying to tear the prey into smaller, easier to swallow pieces. Many humans lucky enough to escape a crocodile attack, have lost entire limbs to this devastating feeding method. But most victims die of blood loss, shock or simply drown before they have a chance to escape.

Most big cats kill prey by strangulation. From the house cat to the tiger and lion, they all go for the neck/throat in most cases, biting so hard and holding so tight that the victim either chokes or has a stroke. In some cases, the bite is deep enough to pierce the windpipe, the jugular vein, or even to snap the neck vertebrae. It often takes a few minutes for a big cat to strangle a large prey to death. But the jaguar is a completely different story. This formidable cat, found in Mexico and Central and South America, has been known to strangle some prey once in a while, but it usually goes for a faster, deadlier method; it simply bites through the skull and pierces the brain, causing instant death. It has particularly long and thick fangs, and incredibly powerful jaws to do this (actually, its bite is much stronger than a lion’s or a tiger’s, relative to the cat’s size).
The skull bite allows the jaguar to kill armored prey such as caimans, as well as the, now extinct, glyptodonts (giant relatives to armadillos), and they have also been known to use this killing method successfully against feral bulls weighing almost half a ton. You could ask, if the jaguar kills its prey so quickly and efficiently, why is it in the list? Shouldn’t the other cats be worse, since it takes minutes for them to strangle prey? Maybe, but it seems that for some not so big, or not so armored prey, the jaguar doesn’t bite through the top of the skull, but rather sinks its fangs into the victims ears! Can you imagine the fangs of a giant cat stabbing through your ears and going into your brain? That’s the stuff of nightmares.

The Cassowary is the only bird that made it to this list. Sure, protective parent owls clawing your eyes out and causing you to fall down a tree to your death (it has happened) are scary, but these birds are usually harmless unless you do something really stupid. While the vegetarian Cassowary (found in the rainforests of Australia and New Guinea) is usually a shy animal, and will try to avoid confrontations, males can be extremely aggressive at times, and zookeepers agree that cassowaries are among the most dangerous creatures to keep in a zoo.
Listed by the Guinness World Records as the world’s most dangerous bird, the Cassowary has an enormous, dagger-like claw on the second toe of each foot. When confronted, it will leap into the air and kick its enemy, kung fu-style, using the deadly claws to cause serious injury. It can, literally, claw your guts out. And even if it doesn’t, the kick is mighty enough to rupture your internal organs and cause massive internal bleeding and death. Needless to say, you should never approach one of these birds, particularly if they are captive or protecting their chicks.

Sloth bears are among the least known bear species. They are found mostly in India and Sri Lanka, where natives fear them even more than tigers or snakes. And with good reason. It has been said that these bears maul at least one person per week in India, and they often seem to attack without provocation. They feed mostly on ants and termites, and only very rarely eat meat, but they seem to dislike humans (which shouldn’t be surprising, since these bears have been subjected to centuries of hunting and cruelty, e.g, dancing bears). They are also short sighted and easily taken by surprise. If confronted, a sloth bear is as likely to attack as it is to run away.
Being mauled by any kind of bear is a horrible way to go, but the Sloth bear is particularly nasty due to its trademark killing method; it uses its teeth and its incredibly long, sharp claws to literally rip the victim’s face off. Those who are lucky enough to escape death after a Sloth bear attack, are usually badly scarred for life, and often left without one of both eyes, nose, lips, etc.

Also known as the driver ant, this African species is the only insect known to actually attack and devour humans, although you have to be very unlucky to die in a Siafu attack. These ants are very slow, and blind; unless you are unable to stay out of their way, you really don’t have to be scared of them. Usually these ants feed on smaller animals, but attacks on sleeping people, babies left unattended, and at least one drunken man who broke a leg and couldn’t run away from the ant army, have all been reported.
Domestic animals such as cows and goats who were left tied to a pole for the night, and thus rendered unable to escape, have also been known to be devoured by Siafu ants. What makes these insects so scary, is that they can bite and sting, but that’s not the way they kill you. During the attack, they will attempt to go into any opening they can find, including your mouth and nose, and victims are said to die of asphyxia after the ants crawl into your lungs! If that’s not scary…

Candiru are rather sinister creatures to start with. These small, slender, almost transparent catfish relatives are among the few hematophagous vertebrates, feeding on the blood of other fish. They do this by going into their gills and anchoring themselves to them with a series of hooked spines they have in their bodies. A severe candiru infestation can weaken and eventually kill the unfortunate victim. They also feed on death fish, eating them from the inside out. Although candiru used to be a little known denizen of the South American rivers, they have lately gained some fame as the most feared fish in the Amazon. That’s right; more so than piranhas and electric eels.
This is because, sometimes, candiru will swim into the urethra or anus of both men and women, and become stuck in there via the hooked spines. This is very painful, and potentially deadly, because when the human victim leaves the water, the fish dies and its body starts to rot. The resulting infection has caused many deaths in remote parts of South America where there aren’t any hospitals, since a delicate surgical procedure is needed to remove the fish from your private parts. Ouch.

Big cats will usually make sure you’re dead before they start feeding on your flesh. They are perfectly equipped to kill their victim quickly and with no mess. However, some of their distant Carnivorous relatives are a completely different story. Although they kill smaller prey by violently shaking them and breaking their spine, wolves and hyenas lack any efficient killing weapons to deal with larger prey, so they usually don’t waste time and start eating as soon as the victim is brought down.
Indeed, it is not uncommon for a large animal to be still alive when the wolf pack or hyena clan is already munching on its intestines. Of course, death follows soon after, due to shock or blood loss, but still, the idea of being alive while a snarling group of voracious predators feeds on your entrails is particularly disturbing to most people, hence the wolf/hyena’s place as #2 in this list.

Tapeworms are gigantic (up to 12 meters long or more depending on the species) although very slender parasites, whose eggs or larvae can be ingested via eating raw or badly cooked meat. Once ingested, the creature will anchor itself to the walls of the host’s intestine and absorb all the nutrients from the host’s food; in other words, you eat, your intestine absorbs the nutrients, and the tapeworm steals the nutrients for itself. The result? You can eat incredible amounts of food and you will still be malnourished.
If left untreated, a tapeworm infection can eventually lead to death by starvation, no matter how much you ate. And just in case you thought it couldn’t be worse, sometimes the tapeworm larvae can find their way into your brain, causing seizures, and all sorts of neurological problems. So, having seizures due to a worm infestation in your brain before you starve to death due to the big adult worm in your gut. The tapeworm just had to be #1.




















What about Steve Irwin and the way he was killed by a Stingray? He was stabbed through the heart by that Fish when he died. Surely that`s horrific.
While I totally agree that it would be a *****house way to die, it's really uncommon for that to happen.
Great list, but lest we forget:
Komodo Dragon: As deeeziner mentioned, the Komodo's mouth is so filthy that victims often die of infection, sometimes lingering for days, with the lizard stalking them the entire while. Of course, if the prey is sufficiently weakened, the lizard may not wait and will begin devouring the victim while it is still alive! And if it finds prey difficult to swallow, it will charge at a nearby rock or tree in an effort to cram the victim down it's throat. Komodos have been known to attack humans, though the attacks are seldom directly fatal.
Shark: Many sharks can be dangerous, especially if provoked. Like hyenas, sharks don't care if prey is dead when they start attacking and will dismember the victim as he or she flails helplessly, before succumbing to blood loss (which most often precedes drowning).
Monkey: Death by monkey? Yep. It happens. Despite what some people would have you believe, monkeys are not cute and cuddly. Attacks on humans by wild and even "domesticated" monkeys are surprisingly common, and given that even a "lowly" chimpanzee has as much as five times the strength of a human, well, the odds aren't in our favor. But it gets worse. Many wild monkeys are carriers of a host of deadly viruses, including Ebola. Ebola, for those who don't know, is a fun little virus that causes death in 30 to 90% of those who contract (depending on the exact form). And it isn't a nice death, either. After 5 to 18 days of horrible pain, you begin bleeding from every orifice on your body (eyes, ears, nose, mouth, anus, and other parts), literally bleeding out your internal organs, which the virus has liquefied.
I hope Pixar comes out with a Amazon based film starring Carl the Candiru
@whtknt : Damn! How about a list of the 10 worst diseases/viruses to die from. Ebola sounds like a lovely way to die! *barf*
I may have to do that one. Ebola is probably the worst I can think of right off the top of my head, but I can think of some that are nearly as gruesome.
Great idea! – but do check to make sure the LV hasn't covered it already. The LV has a reputation for similar catastrophies of gruesomeness.
God, you could go on forever with that.. Smallpox, Anthrax, Cholera, AIDS, Spanish Flu, The Black Death, Malaria, Yellow Fever, Swine Flu, Bird Flu..
I know you don`t get killed, but what about the Fiery Serpent, that Worm in Africa, which, goes into your penis when you have a *****? Or the Botfly? Oh God.. Makes me feel faint.
Out of all animals, the botfly is the one I dread the most. It may show up in future lists (altough I shiver at the thought of looking at whatever picture Jamie may use for it).
As for the fiery serpent, it doesn´t go up your penis (that's the candiru); you drink its eggs accidentally and the adult worm later migrates to your skin. It's very painful and very disgusting but rarely lethal.
They're all gruesome ways to die, but I would hate to have my face ripped off by a sloth bear.
Nasty Nasty Nasty!!! is rather have my head bitten by a tiger.. quickest.
What about being swallowed alive? Sitting in a stomach, slowly suffocating while suffering from digestive enzyme burns?
by me!
ew ew ew ew ew ew ew
I live in north queensland in Australia and I see a cassawary pretty much everyday once one walked right up to the bus stop I was waiting at…I thought I was gonna die
anyway great list
Cheers
Enjoyed going through the list and learned a few things.
great list … messed up, but great!
#3 just gave me phobia of bathing :S
Great list once again!
The crocodile and alligators kill their prey, but don't immediately eat. They like to wait a week, or more, in order to soften the flesh of their long gone kill before devouring.
Either or, all of these creatures were enough to scare me away from Africa [both land and water], South America, and other parts of the globe. Creepy.
Except for the talons, dont most of the larger flightless birds have a deadly kick?
emu and ostriches for example?
Correct. But the cassowary is more aggressive than its relatives, and has cooler weaponry.
Awesome list!!
If I ever encounter any of these, I'm just going to drop kick the sky and hope my neck breaks.
I, too, didn't know tapeworms would kill… Since they're a parasite, they're supposed to keep the host alive by taking on enough nutrients so that both survive. If they kill the host, they pretty much kill themselves.
OR, I'm just wrong, probably the latter ^_^
By the time the tapeworm kills you, you have probably released (via answering nature's call) many of its eggs into the outer world, ensuring the continuation of its genes. Mission acomplished for the adult worm.
isn't any way to be killed an awful way though?
Nah. I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my grandfather. Not screaming in abject terror, like his passengers!
How about a list of most embarassing ways to be killed by an animal? Like tripping over the cat, falling down the stairs and breaking your neck. God, I hate cats.
TyB,
You have great pictures. With the exception of the Tape Worm, why are humans in the animal's space? Just a Thought. These are mostly wild animals driven by Fear of Man. Have you thought about people who die because their pets died? Some people really love their pets. That's another way an animal can kill a person.
I love some animals from a distance. From a distance.
I got the point. Thank you.
Viivan Dixon Sober
Great list, but there has never been a recorded wild wolf attack. . . Not good to add to their needless bad rep.
Sorry but, wild wolf attacks do happen, and have happened since prehistoric times. Here's a nice website on the subject. I love wolves, but stating that they don´t attack people, is the same as saying that there has never been a wild bear, tiger or shark attack. Yes, the wolf's reputation is exagerated, but there is no doubt that they are potentially dangerous, as are all large predators out there. http://www.aws.vcn.com/wolf_attacks_on_humans.htm…
Crocs and Alligators scare the bejeezes out of me. My dad was working in Florida, near the swamps, on Cape Canaveral, and he would tell us how the 'gators sounded just like big bull frogs.
~zip to many years later~
I am in the Yucatan, staying overnight at a hotel on the beach. The hotel has no electricity, no phones. I need to call home and check in with my kids. So I ask at the dive shop next door.
They tell me there is a phone at the American hotel about a mile down the beach, and to make sure, absolutely sure, that I walk as close to the surf line as possible the entire way there and back.
O.K.
It's pitch dark as I start to walk. The stars and moon are beautifully reflected on the ocean, but I can't see more than a few feet ahead of me.
Then I notice there is a string of lights, right at ground level, way up the beach, lighting the sand all around and something dark behind.
I'm wondering why the heck I'm stumbling around in the dark when there is a lighted path no more than 200 yards away. So off I go to take advantage of the light.
I hadn't gone more than 20 feet when I heard that deep bull frog croaking!
EEEEEEEKKKKKK!
No wonder the dive shop guy had been so serious about my staying close to the surfline!
I ran as fast as one can run in soft sand, sure a croc was right behind me.
Obviously not.
But on my return trip, I never strayed from the surf.
BTW, TyB, now that you have included a snake in one of your lists, I can modify my previous comment.
You do know something about all animals.
Yucatan has its fair share of Morelet's crocodiles (a species I worked with). Not as aggressive as American crocs or gators, but very dangerous if you go anywhere near their nests. (I had a scary experience with a female guarding her nest during an experiment to see how fast she would react to the call of her babies).
As for snakes… pythons were in my list about animals once thought to be a legend
Remember? They were the original dragons.
Surprised that the Honey Badger isn't on the list. The way that Honey Badger gets you, is by ripping your testicles off.
I did consider the Honey Badger but couldn´t find any info that confirmed the testicle ripping story. Perfectly plausible, tho.
I gotta put the Siafu ants at #1. That's a sucky way to go.
Great list. One small quibble: A boa (and other constrictors) don't squeeze tighter when the victims try to inhale. They squeeze tighter when the victims exhale and the lungs are smaller. All of these are horrible ways to die, however.
I can't wait to hear this in podcast.
an intriguing description of some of the lesser known fauna….a commendable job…!!
These are all awful and i`m sure we can think of a few more, but the worst of all is…being killed at all by an animal. Does'nt matter how you go, you still will have to take the final swan dive and you wont be able to tell any of your friends about it.
Great great list. For me, the worst way to die would be a hanible type of kill. He opens your skull and cuts your brain, cooks it and feeds it to you. Imagine him doing this to your whole body until you die. Think local anaethesia. Think hanibo as the animal. Terrible.
Questions re: #3;
they feed on death fish? what is a death fish? did the author mean dead fish? why is the word 'rape' in the title? no mention of rape in the description. check your definitions, plz.
#1. it's not the volts that get you, it's the amps.
Exactly!
I use to work at Australia Zoo (Steve Irwins one) and I was always more scared of the cassowarys than the crocodiles. Sure crocodiles are creepy as hell up close with their huge snapping jaws of teeth but as long as people stay away from their watery homes they will be fine. I could stare at those beautiful creatures for hours (behind a fence) and feel calm as a hindu cow. On the other hand I would always keep as far away from the cassowary enclosure. They are like giant clawed dinosourish ninja birds. They would kick the gashes into trees (target practice) and follow you along the fence line.
-Is that a candiru in your anus???
-Uhm yeah I… just fell over it.
Candiru = TOOL OF SATAN!
That's what Hell's going to be………….Stuck in a pool full of Candirus……………
Assuming that the writer of this list arranged the list in descending order, I disagree with the arrangement of the list. The hyena, sloth bear and/or jaguar should be first, with the candiru should be a very close second (being eaten/mauled alive is worse than dying from an infection, in my book). Nevertheless, this is a very interesting, if gruesome, list.
It should be noted that during the 1800's,I belive.That tapeworms were a form of weight loss treatment ,where a doctar or someone would give you the tapeworms and then when you reached the desired weight you take a medicine that kills the worm.
I do not remmber if this ture so dont hold me to it.I think anouther awful way to die by a animal is being pecked to death by a bird I belive a ostrage.I also think anouther horrilber way to be mauled to death by a polar pear,which there is a video of a victum a pear being riped apart; and fainliy also do not know if this is true but I think narwhals are know to impeal other creature when threatened.
i'm only 10 but iwas going to make this list
my mom say i haves tapeworn cause i eat so much and so skinny.
What about the Komodo dragon? Argh! Those suckers eat you inside out, via any orifice. Blah!
These animals are pretty disgusting. I just read this article on the marine animals that have uniquely become oversized, monsters actually and they're downright dirty when it comes to self-defense. Read the interesting article here:
<a href="http://monster*****posed.blogspot.com/2010/06/helloo.html
">Monsters of the Deep
the rape happens only if you pee in the water,the fish thing likes warm water
im worried now because i am hungry
What about Guinea worm syndrome or Dracunculiasis? It could be fatal
The Candiru is real? I thought The Monarch was bluffing.
Go team venture!
That is a pretty intense list.
Scary stuff… I remember watching this Tyra Banks show about people wanting to ingest tapeworm eggs so they can be host to grown tapeworms in order to lose weight, you gotta be kidding me.
ohh gawd, i approached a cassowary bird in a park because it was walking free. in that park they just left the cassowary bird to walk around and people are amused to look at it.. until it attacked… now it’s somewhere locked up.
One is missing:
Lethal injection
By certain jellyfish, like Chironex fleckeri.
This list made me all…shaky.
Very good list.
Holy…crap
I did register but because of the site congestion/errors my Debit Card has 3 holds of 130 dollars on it. These Phantom Holds wont actually be charged to my account according to the registration page, but its still real money that is being withheld from me. If they want to keep the standards the same in the future, then they should probably have a lottery drawing for everyone. This way its at least fair for everyone trying to register.
The tapeworm is DISGUSTING! Eugh, I just.. I just can’t imagine having one of those in my stomach, OH PUKE. D:
wow it was an interesting chapter . i loved to read it
i liked the anacondas most
there was a man in india that went away on vacation for 2 weeks, leaving his 7 dogs alone in the house with no food. 1 week after the man returned from vacation, the police were alerted to a strange smell coming from inside the mans house.
detectives soon found the bones of the owner (serves him right) and sadly 1 of the pups.
ok just looked for this story, ahem! its indonesia, not india. there were 9 dogs, not 7. my memories doing ok…
http://www.inquisitr.com/139936/indonesian-man-eaten-by-starving-pet-dogs/
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