These are the world's deadliest animals

July 2024 · 5 minute read
2016-09-08T15:25:33Z

The world's deadliest animal isn't a shark or even a human.

Drawing from a 2014 graphic from Bill Gates' blog, we decided to rank the world's deadliest animals. Most of the deaths caused by animals, it turns out, have less to do with the animals themselves than the diseases they unwittingly transmit.

Note that some numbers are harder to get an accurate read on than others, so these are for the most part rough estimates — sometimes very rough. And the list is representative of different kinds of deadly animals, but it's by no means comprehensive.

Some mosquitoes can transmit malaria, a deadly disease. AP

Here are some of the animals responsible for the most human deaths. The scariest predators aren't as dangerous as you might expect — but don't underestimate the little guys.

15. Sharks: 6 deaths a year

Jose María Melero Tejedor/YouTube

Shark attacks are pretty rare. In 2014, there were just three deaths globally related to shark attacks, and in 2015, there were six, which is about the average. 

14. Wolves: 10 deaths a year

John Moore/Getty Images

Wolf attacks are not common in many parts of the world where wolves live. A review of wolf attacks found that very few happened in the 50 years leading up to 2002 in Europe and North America, though there were a few hundred reported over the course of two decades in some regions of India, averaging out to close to 10 per year.

13. Lions: 22+ deaths a year

A lion roars in the Masai Mara national park, Kenya. AP/Vadim Ghirda

Estimates for lion-related deaths also vary year-to-year. A 2005 study found that since 1990, lions have killed 563 people in Tanzania alone, an average of about 22 a year. Additional deaths likely occur outside of Tanzania, but it's difficult to find a concrete global number. 

12. Elephants: 500 deaths a year

A bird flies over a family of elephants walking in the Amboseli National Park, southeast of Kenya's capital Nairobi Thomson Reuters

Elephants are also responsible for a number of deaths per year — a 2005 National Geographic article said that 500 people a year are killed in elephant attacks. Far more elephants have been killed by people.

11. Hippopotamuses: 500 deaths a year

A hippopotamus eats a cold watermelon in its enclosure in Belgrade's zoo, August 24, 2012 REUTERS/Ivan Milutinovic

For a long time, hippos were considered the most deadly animal in Africa. Hippos are known for being aggressive toward humans, including tipping over boats.

9. Tapeworms: 700 deaths a year

Tomas De la Rosa/Wikimedia Commons

Moving to parasites, the tapeworm is responsible for an infection called cysticerosis that kills an estimated 700 people a year

10. Crocodiles: 1,000 deaths a year

A large saltwater crocodile shows aggression as a boat passes by. Rob Griffith/AP

Crocodiles are now considered the large animal responsible for the most human deaths in Africa, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, though concrete numbers are tricky to gather.

8. Ascaris roundworms: 4,500 deaths a year

CDC

The Ascaris roundworm leads to an infection called aschariasis that kills an estimated 4,500 people a year, according to a 2013 study. The WHO notes that the infection takes place in people's small intestine, and it's a disease that affects more children than adults.

5. Tsetse flies: 10,000 deaths a year

Wikimedia Commons

The tsetse fly transmits a disease called sleeping sickness, a parasitic infection that at first can lead to headaches, fever, joint pain, and itchiness, but later can lead to some serious neurological problems. The number of deaths has been decreasing. With about 10,000 new cases now reported each year, the estimated number of annual deaths is likely on the decline as well.

6. Assassin bugs: 12,000 deaths a year

Wikimedia Commons

The assassin bug, also called the kissing bug, is responsible for carrying Chagas disease, which kills about 12,000 people a year on average. Chagas disease is a parasitic infection passed by the bug, which got its nickname by biting people on the face.

7. Freshwater snails: 20,000+ deaths a year

Flickr/anemoneprojectors

The freshwater snail carries parasitic worms that infect people with a disease called schistosomiasis that can cause intense abdominal pain and blood in the stool or urine, depending on the area that's affected. Millions of people contract the infection, and the WHO estimates that anywhere between 20,000 and 200,000 deaths can be attributed to schistosomiasis. 

4. Dogs: 35,000 deaths a year

Likely not a rabid dog Shutterstock

Dogs — specifically dogs infected by the rabies virus — are one of the deadliest animals out there, though the virus can be prevented using vaccines. About 35,000 deaths can be attributed to rabies, and of those cases, 99% are caused by dogs, according to WHO.

3. Snakes: 100,000 deaths a year

Nasser Nuri/Reuters

Snake bites kill more than 100,000 people a year as of 2015. Worse still, there's a troubling shortage of an essential antivenom.

2. Humans: 437,000 deaths a year

People flock over the Brooklyn Bridge during a massive power outage in New York on August 14, 2003. Sweltering New Yorkers were hit by a giant power blackout on Thursday that stranded thousands of commuters, trapped subway riders underground and evoked fearful memories of the September 11 attacks. Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, there were about 437,000 homicides in 2012, making humans the second most deadly animal (and the deadliest mammal) to humans. We are not quite our own worst enemy — but we're pretty close.

1. Mosquitoes: 750,000 deaths a year

A Culex quinquefasciatus mosquito is seen on the skin of a human host Thomson Reuters

Mosquitoes — the pesky bugs that suck blood and transmit viruses from person to person — are responsible for the most animal-related deaths.

Malaria by itself is responsible for more than half of mosquito-related deaths, predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa, though it's on the decline: The incidence of malaria fell by 37% between 2000 and 2015, according to the World Health Organization.

Dengue fever, another mosquito-borne disease, has become a leading cause of hospitalization and death among children in some Asian and Latin-American countries.

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