is one of the species involved in the most unprovoked fatal attacks on humans.
Crocodiles Crocodile attacks on people are common in places where crocodiles are native. The
saltwater and
Nile crocodiles are responsible for more attacks and more deaths than any other wild predator that attacks humans for food. Each year, hundreds of deadly attacks are attributed to the Nile crocodile within
sub-Saharan Africa. Because many relatively healthy populations of Nile crocodiles occur in East Africa, their proximity to people living in poverty and/or without infrastructure has made it likely that the Nile crocodile is responsible for more attacks on humans than all other species combined. One notorious man-eating crocodilian is
Gustave. In Australia, crocodiles have also been responsible for several deaths in the tropical north of the country.
Mugger crocodiles are another crocodile species that may see people as prey as they kill many people in Asia each year, although not to the same level as the saltwater and Nile crocodiles. All crocodile species are potentially dangerous to humans, but most do not actively prey on them.
Alligators Despite their manifest ability to kill prey similar to or larger than humans in size and their commonness in an area of dense human settlement (the southeastern United States, especially Florida),
American alligators rarely prey upon humans. Even so, there have been several notable instances of alligators opportunistically attacking humans, especially the careless, small children, and elderly. Unlike the far more dangerous saltwater and Nile crocodiles, the majority of alligators avoid contact with humans if possible, especially if they have been hunted. Incidents have happened, and they may not all have been predatory in nature.
Snakes Very few species of snakes are physically capable of swallowing an adult human. Although quite a few claims have been made about giant snakes swallowing adult humans, only a limited number have been confirmed. Various species of
pythons are the most commonly recorded perpetrators. In 2017 in Indonesia, an
adult male was discovered inside a python. On 14 June 2018 a 54-year-old woman named Wa Tiba was eaten by a
reticulated python, which had slithered into her garden at her home. A 45-year-old woman
farmer in Indonesia, who had been missing since the day before, was found dead inside a python in June 2024. Large constricting snakes will sometimes constrict and kill prey that are too large to swallow. Also, multiple cases are documented of medium-sized () captive
Burmese pythons constricting and killing humans, including several nonintoxicated, healthy adult men, one of whom was a "student" zookeeper. In the zookeeper case, the python was attempting to swallow the zookeeper's head when other keepers intervened. A large constricting snake may constrict or swallow an infant or a small child, a threat that is legitimate and empirically proven. Cases of python attacks on children have been recorded for the reticulated python, the
African rock python, and the Burmese python. In the
Philippines, more than a quarter of
Aeta men (a modern forest-dwelling hunter-gatherer group) have reported surviving
reticulated python predation attempts. Pythons are nonvenomous ambush predators, and both the Aeta and pythons hunt deer, wild pigs, and monkeys, making them competitors and prey. In Australia there has been one recorded case of an
amethystine python attempting to consume an adult human.
Lizards Large
Komodo dragons are the only known lizard species to occasionally attack and consume humans. Because they live on remote islands, attacks are infrequent and may go unreported. Despite their large size, attacks on people are often unsuccessful and the victims manage to escape with their lives, albeit severely wounded. Komodo dragons have been known to consume human corpses, usually by digging up shallow graves. This has led to the villagers of Komodo Island to relocate their graves, and pile rocks on top of them to deter the dragons. ==Birds==