One misstep and you’re dinner
Hungry for adventure? 10 places where animals eat you
![]() Danita Delimont / Alamy The Jaguar is a classic “stalk and ambush” predator, and the largest and most dangerous big cat in the Western Hemisphere. Peru’s sprawling Manu National Park is ideal habitat for jaguars — thick rainforest with numerous streams and oxbow lakes where prey like deer gather. |
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Despite mankind’s mastery of Planet Earth, there are still an awful lot of creatures out there willing to kill (and even eat) you if given half a chance. As well as an ever-increasing number of adrenaline junkies bent on getting as close to these creatures as possible—and living to tell about it.
“Most African safari guides say that buffalo are the most dangerous animals because they are easily startled and their first instinct is to charge,” says Matt Kareus of Colorado-based Natural Habitat Adventures, which organizes wildlife safaris all around the globe. “Most also say though that nothing is more lethal than getting between a hippo and its water at night. And many of our Alaska guides say moose are more dangerous than bears. A lot depends on circumstance and the likelihood of an encounter in the first place.”
The fear factor often depends on personal experience. For Australian wildlife guide Mark Christensen, the saltwater crocodile is the creature to avoid at all cost. He’s never been attacked himself, but Christensen has spent long enough in the Outback to amass a sizeable collection of croc attack stories. Like the 1987 death of American model Ginger Meadows, who was taken by a croc in the remote Kimberley region during a casual swim near her yacht. The skipper saw the croc approaching her and screamed. But it was too late. “She suddenly went underwater for 30 seconds,” Christensen relates. “She came back up, was dragged back underwater and that’s the last they saw of her alive.”
For Tanzanian guide George Mavroudis, the animal most likely to send shivers up his spine is the African lion. During a private family safari, his girlfriend awoke one morning about 30 yards outside of their camp. She didn’t remember moving during the night. But there were lion tracks all around and teeth marks in the bottom of her sleeping bag. “Her father deduced that a lion had come in the night,” Mavroudis remembers, “dug its teeth into the foot of the bag and started dragging it off.” At some point in time, the lion must have decided that it was just too much work and given up. “Lucky for her she never woke up while the lion was pulling her. She would have been dead.”
Despite poaching and habitat destruction, violent contact between humans and many large predators seems to be on the upswing rather than vice versa. Bear and cougar attacks have increased in North America, tiger assaults are mounting in parts of Asia, as people move into their territory and the animals find themselves boxed into corners rather than able to flee.
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Brendan Raisbeck / Alamy Lions may have a more ferocious reputation, but the large animal responsible for the most human fatalities in Africa is the hippopotamus — an estimated 100-150 deaths per year. Found throughout tropical Africa, Zambia is thought to have more hippo (40,000) than any other nation. |
At the same time, fictional films and books remind us that animals can—and often do—turn on humans. As the unfortunate Timothy Treadwell demonstrated in the mesmerizing Werner Herzog film "Grizzly Man", bears can go from cuddly to predatory in the blink of an eye.
Why is it that people crave such close contact with deadly creatures?
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Photoshot Holdings Ltd / Alamy The world’s largest venomous snake, the Cobra, is found throughout tropical Africa and Asia, but its largest concentration is Southeast Asia, where they are responsible for several hundred human deaths each year. They are found everywhere from suburban Singapore to Vietnamese rice paddies. The untouched rainforest of Khao Sok National Park in southern Thailand harbors four different cobra species including the king and spitting. |
Potentially deadly animals can sometimes dwell close to home. But more often these days you have to venture into the wilderness, and in some cases the ends of the earth, far away from the world’s most deadly species—homo sapiens. Here are some ways to view them in safety and style.
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