Not all animals are cute and cuddly, especially in Australia. The country is home to 66 venomous species, making it the third country with the most dangerous wildlife in the world. It’s not unusual to meet a deadly fellow on your way to the shop or even the bathroom.
Sure, it sounds scary to live there, but don’t worry; the locals have totally mastered how to stay safe around scary creatures, armed with an array of sticks and sometimes a potato sack or a pillowcase.
While the locals have grown to feel relatively safe, our Bored Panda team's collection of terrifying animals from the Land Down Under will make you appreciate the comfort of your own home. Warning: They’re guaranteed to send a few shivers down your spine.
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Nothing To See Here, Just Keep Moving
Reason #47 Why Australia Is Not Messing Around
Fun Australian fact - this kangaroo is waiting for pursuers to come into the water with him, where he will try to drown them. They are extremely good at it. Never, ever go into water with a kangaroo. Everything has lots of innovative ways to attack you here.
Really glad I read this. My dumb a** would totally try to swim with the kangaroo. He's basically inviting you to with his cuteness. Honey trap.
It's So Hot Here In Australia At The Moment, And I Wondered Why Birds Weren't Using Our Bird Bath
The plethora of scary animals in Australia is mainly a consequence of geographical placement and evolution. 180 million years ago, Africa, South America, India, Australia and Antarctica were all joined together, and as they split apart, the venomous creatures were divided. Australia, the most isolated continent, was an encouraging ground for animals to become more dangerous.
Take snakes, for example. If all of them had venom of identical strength, they could only kill prey of one size, and eventually there wouldn’t be enough food. That’s why their venom usually differs in potency, allowing them to feed on different victims. Then, snakes are able to eat more food, survive, and pass toxicity on to future generations. This way, they become more and more common and significantly more venomous. Boom, evolution.
Got Home From Work To Find This Tarantula Hawk Wasp Draging A Huntsman Spider (Sydney, Australia)
Why You Must Check Your Shoes In Australia. Second Most Venomous Land Snake
Bunnings Really Does Sell Everything
Australia is also home to one of the most venomous creatures on the surface of the earth - box jellyfish. The sting is unbelievably painful and may cause paralysis, cardiac arrest, and death within five minutes. Survivors experience pain for weeks and often have scarring where the tentacles touched the skin. It doesn’t help that the deadliest animal is see-through and pale blue—perfectly disguised in the background of marines.
Female Golden Orb Weaver On A Mate's Hat. Australia
Bull Shark At The Back Fence Due To Recent Flooding, Gold Coast, Australia
Australia is so of the hinge with their animals 😂 I really want to visit, cause I’m in love with the country and it’s people, but with my luck I die on day one because I put on my shoe without looking…
Found This Fella Stuck In The Middle Of The Road, Took Him To Safety Behind A Tree
Thorny Devil, Found In Central Australia
Obviously, not all information circulating online about the mythical Australian wildlife is true. In reality, not all venomous creatures are going to kill you. They live in outback bushland areas, and the chances of meeting them are very slim. For instance, only two people per year die in Australia from snakebite, and it often happens due to people’s recklessness, like handling them or reaching into holes. Snakes are shy, retreating creatures, and they’ll slither away when approached.
There are a ton of species that look like bad news but are actually harmless. The common Australian Huntsman spider is just about the most terrifying looking thing, but it actually is a friend. They’re quite useful to keep around because they eat a lot of creatures that you truly don’t want to come across.
Come To Australia. It's Safe, Mate
I've met a surprising number of Ozzies who are like, "Oh, I was afraid to come to Canada because of the wildlife." And okay, yeah, we have bears and wolves and cougars - *in the woods*. I can absolutely guarantee that nobody's ever gone to unlock their car in the morning in downtown Vancouver and found a territorial moose hiding in the door handle.
Spider Takes On Snake And Wins
Carpet Python Coming Out To Say Hello At A Service Station, Australia
This Is The Largest Huntsman Spider In Australia But Also A Very Docile Species
Contrary to popular belief, most aquatic species in Australia are harmless to humans. Venomous sea animals like stingrays, stonefish, and marine snails are perfectly safe when they are left alone, as none are aggressive by nature.
Steve Irwin (the famous crocodile hunter) was very unfortunate to die in an accident involving a stingray. Their deadly attacks on humans are exceedingly rare, but because he was stabbed right in the heart, he died almost instantly. If Steve had been injured anywhere else, he probably would’ve survived to tell the tale.
The Morning Shoe Check (Before We Put Them On) Saved My Wife A Bit Of Pain Today
A Friend Woke Up To Find This Little Guy Had Crawled Up Their Toilet. Just Another Day On Christmas Island
Spider Webs Covering A Street Light. Yes Australia
It seems like Australia shouldn't be inhabited by humans. Nature itself clearly seems to think so.
I Love Australia
If scrolling through these pictures brought you intense anxiety, you might suffer from zoophobia—a fear of animals. It's estimated that more than 12% of adults in the US have this fright. Most of the time, it’s directed at a specific kind of animal, like snakes, spiders, or rats. While a person with zoophobia knows that their fear is likely irrational, they can’t really control it. A fear of frogs might seem silly, but to some, they bring a sense of dread even just thinking about them.
This phobia may develop due to negative experiences with animals. For example, someone who’s been attacked by a dog may become terrified of them. Additionally, we may learn such behavior from a parent or a sibling, and genetics may influence us to be more anxious around wildlife than others.
The New Child Safety Lock Works Great
Woke Up To A Snake In My Drawer (Australia)
The Annual Red Crab Mass Migration To The Sea To Spawn
Nope
However, you shouldn’t worry. Australia is very aware that there are a lot of dangerous species around, so they take precautions to ensure that everyone remains safe. Most populated beaches have lifeguards who announce when it’s risky to go in the water, and helicopters monitor for any shark activity. Lifeguards are also on the lookout for dangerous jellyfish in the water and will ensure that no one stays in the water when they are spotted. For extra safety, many beaches have underwater netting to detect sharks, and some have enclosed ocean pools ideal for swimming.
Additionally, if you aren’t allowed to go or take a dip somewhere, there will be signs prohibiting you from doing so. A beach that might seem perfectly good to swim in for a tourist may have saltwater crocodiles inhabiting it. So, if you’re not supposed to go anywhere, there will be a sign for it, or you can ask a local just in case.
See, not everything in Australia is out to get you; most of it is incredibly exaggerated or created to spook you.
Watch Out For These Guys As You Travel Up The Peninsula, Forming A Line A Few Meters In Length
They look like Eichenprozessionsspinner. Oak processionary catepillar, they have been a problem in my part of Germany the last few years. The spikes can be dangerous, especially when inhaled.
Inhaled? "Hey, Verne! There's this giant creepy looking thing! I'm going to see what it smells like!"
Load More Replies...Cuckoos will eat these things fine without a worry apparently. But cuckoos are also lazy buggers who take over nests to get other hosts to raise their eggs.
I heard they do it because they can't feed their babies the s**t they eat
Load More Replies...Basically the land based version of the Mediterranean fireworm.
We got those - or family - in our country too. A lot of trouble at times
Assassin caterpillars? I thought those were native to South America? (Genuine curiosity here)
We Just Found This Massive Stick Insect On Our Bins This Morning
Nothing wrong with a stick insect. They don't hurt you and they look awesome.
Morning Commute In Australia
Okay, Who Had Spider Invasion For March? New South Wales, Australia. After 26" Of Rain In 5 Days, Some Locals Are Looking For A New Home. (Everything Brown In This Pic Has 8 Legs)
That's Why I Check My Earphones Every Time Before I Put Them On, The Same Goes For My Shoes
So Much For Changing The Battery
Unexpected Passenger Riding With My Hubby
Just Another Day Down Under. My Mum's Partner Found This Brown Snake Under His Toilet Lid
There's A Toad In My Boot
A Night Full Of Mosquitoes In Mildura, Australia
Not Cleaning Myself With This
what if you just grabbed and yanked it reallly hard so the spider is in a tornado
See Even Shopping In Australia Has Its Challenges
Went To Go Open My Garage Door, And Now I Have To Burn It To The Ground
I Thought It'd Be Nice To Appreciate A Truly Wonderful Aussie Creature, The Macropanesthia Rhinoceros
Forget Fluffy Dice. Only In Australia Would You Come Back To Your Car To See A Coastal Carpet Python Wrapped Around The Mirror
Spider In Our Pantry
About To Start My Home Workout And Saw This Guy Hanging Out On My Ball (Australia)
Scary Find In The Car
Camping In Queensland, Australia
Just A Huntsman That Crawled Out Of My Kettle This Morning
Classic Australia. A Wasp Eating A Huntsman Spider. What A Nice Thing To Wake Up To
Golden Orb Spider Eating A Micro Bat In Australia
This Strange Insect Was Sitting On A Mandarin Tree In Central Queensland, Australia
I Was Mowing The Lawn And Discovered This 35 Cm Long Stick Insect
Carpet Python Nice And Cosy On A Chair
Only In Australia, Just A Few Spiders Escaping The 45 Degree Heat
Only In Australia
We Initially Thought There Was Only 1 Snake, 2 Minutes After Leaving, We Received Another Call From The Same Lady Stating There Was Another Carpet Python In A Different Spot
I think this whole post is financed by the New Zealand Board of Tourism...." Don' t go to Australia, the land of the nope... you better come to NZ, we only have fluffy sheep"
And my brother is in Aussie right now, traveling with family. I sent the link to his wife LOL
Load More Replies...Australians must be the most badass people on this planet. How do they even survive? Are they all related to Chuck Norris?! I was this close to writing "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH" under every single pic.
Meh, I'm 56 and I count under 50 lifetimes instances of minor little nope events. You just learn to be aware and 99% of the time, they have no interest in you.
Load More Replies...I can barely survive with a miniscule spider in my house.. HOW DO PEOPLE LIVE IN AUSTRALIA 😭
You just get used to it, you know what's dangerous and what's not and what to do to avoid harming or being harmed. I lived closed to the rain forest for decades and the worst that happened was a wasp sting. Mosquitoes and cockroaches are 100% more annoying and even dangerous
Load More Replies...These pics are literally a full on RED FLAG OF "DO NOT GO TO AUSTRALIA!!!"
As an Arborist from Florida this is part of the reason I chose to move to Colorado. It's an alien planet down there compared to here.
Reality here...in the last decade in Australia there has been less than 300 deaths attributable to animals. So far, in 2023, there have been more than 35 000 people killed by gun violence in America. Australia normally sits at around the low 200's per year. And I'll preempt some of you here: Australia 0.91 per 100k citizens, America 10.89 per 100k citizens. Which country really is the most dangerous? A big NOPE to America for me.
I would like to say that I live in Australia and have only had a snake in my yard 2 or 3 times. And 2 huntsmen inside, and that one snake on the door of my distant-relatives house, and my parents' friends' kids had some pet stick insects for a while...
Me too. One snake when I was living in the suburbs (but had a creek behind the property) and one when visiting my mum on her bush property. I love having huntsmen visit, but haven't seen one for 5 years.
Load More Replies...The pythons aren't poisonous though, right? So you'd just need a snake catcher stick thing and a bag at the house? Put them further away?
Are there any Australians here? I've always wondered if this is something you deal with on a daily basis; like, is it ordinary that you get in your car and a giant spider is there? Or you're walking somewhere and there's a spider eating a snake? You wake up to find a snake in your laundry basket? How common is it?
ToGo, it’s really not that bad. There are several seasons for animals so sometimes you need to watch your head and look up so you don’t get swooped, and other times you need to look down so you don’t step on a snake. But if you’re self aware and stay on the beaten path you won’t encounter a lot of these at least in Victoria. NSW and Queensland seems to always get the murder animals
Load More Replies...Well it’s official. Me and my arachnophobia are staying far far away from Australia
I live in England, and I love bugs, snakes and creepy-crawlies, but right now, I want to go and lock myself into an airtight room for the rest of my life.
i have lived in straya my whole life and never met half of these animals. i live out in woop woop and the only animals i see are the bogans
I love geocaching, especially in other countries, but I would not do this in Australia!
I start volunteering with my local zoo's LVI department soon (lower vertebrate and invertebrates) and thankfully we have none of these. Just 2 Caiman cross to worry about though. Here in the UK we have false black widows, not as deadly but still hurts ( as my sister just found out) but our shed has a few, luckily we saw them before we decided to clean it out, cuz it's a huge nope whilst they're in there
Florida is worse. Filled with snakes, spiders, roaches that fly! And they have this enormous insect called a "DeSantis" there's only one but he creates mindless carbons copies of himself and you really can't avoid it no matter what. I'd live for 1000 years in Australia before spending 1 minute in the cesspool that is Florida.
I'm terrified of spiders. Why did i click this article. I'd be fine with snakes, crocodiles, stick insects, and all that, but the spiders. nope. can't do it. I'm afraid I'll never get to go to Australia. ;-; (and to be honest the heat would also kill me)
very kewl I own 20 tarantulas as pets some there is no way id put my hands in their containers.
Where is a place in the world with the least amount of wildlife of any kind?
I would be happy to visit Australia, provided I can bring a flamethrower along. And this post hasn't even shown what's in the water yet, save for one bull shark post but even that was a case of flooding -_-"
Well, flamethrowers are illegal here... It's not really as bad as this makes it look.
Load More Replies...So what I'm getting is Australia has some reptiles and arachnids. Got it.
Haha! This thread is about terrestrial non mammal species. The birds, mammals then what's in the water as you desperately run away to the sea?
Eh... the only thing the U.S. doesn't have is the frogman kangaroo. We got huntsman, plus black widows... and brown recluses. And pythons? They're not even venomous! We've got rattlers, coral snakes, copperheads. We've got alligators AND crocodiles. And what we have instead of roos has head armor the size of a Toyota. Plus, ticks to kill you four different ways.
The USA has the scariest of them all: MAGA supporters. With guns.
Load More Replies...Because it's bloody hot and we don't do it when in the bush :)
Load More Replies...well 0.4% of Australians have vision impairments and usually that number is around 3 or 4% of a population so my guess is they just don't
Load More Replies...I'm glad I live in New Zealand where there is no dangerous animals (expect for humans)
I think this whole post is financed by the New Zealand Board of Tourism...." Don' t go to Australia, the land of the nope... you better come to NZ, we only have fluffy sheep"
And my brother is in Aussie right now, traveling with family. I sent the link to his wife LOL
Load More Replies...Australians must be the most badass people on this planet. How do they even survive? Are they all related to Chuck Norris?! I was this close to writing "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH" under every single pic.
Meh, I'm 56 and I count under 50 lifetimes instances of minor little nope events. You just learn to be aware and 99% of the time, they have no interest in you.
Load More Replies...I can barely survive with a miniscule spider in my house.. HOW DO PEOPLE LIVE IN AUSTRALIA 😭
You just get used to it, you know what's dangerous and what's not and what to do to avoid harming or being harmed. I lived closed to the rain forest for decades and the worst that happened was a wasp sting. Mosquitoes and cockroaches are 100% more annoying and even dangerous
Load More Replies...These pics are literally a full on RED FLAG OF "DO NOT GO TO AUSTRALIA!!!"
As an Arborist from Florida this is part of the reason I chose to move to Colorado. It's an alien planet down there compared to here.
Reality here...in the last decade in Australia there has been less than 300 deaths attributable to animals. So far, in 2023, there have been more than 35 000 people killed by gun violence in America. Australia normally sits at around the low 200's per year. And I'll preempt some of you here: Australia 0.91 per 100k citizens, America 10.89 per 100k citizens. Which country really is the most dangerous? A big NOPE to America for me.
I would like to say that I live in Australia and have only had a snake in my yard 2 or 3 times. And 2 huntsmen inside, and that one snake on the door of my distant-relatives house, and my parents' friends' kids had some pet stick insects for a while...
Me too. One snake when I was living in the suburbs (but had a creek behind the property) and one when visiting my mum on her bush property. I love having huntsmen visit, but haven't seen one for 5 years.
Load More Replies...The pythons aren't poisonous though, right? So you'd just need a snake catcher stick thing and a bag at the house? Put them further away?
Are there any Australians here? I've always wondered if this is something you deal with on a daily basis; like, is it ordinary that you get in your car and a giant spider is there? Or you're walking somewhere and there's a spider eating a snake? You wake up to find a snake in your laundry basket? How common is it?
ToGo, it’s really not that bad. There are several seasons for animals so sometimes you need to watch your head and look up so you don’t get swooped, and other times you need to look down so you don’t step on a snake. But if you’re self aware and stay on the beaten path you won’t encounter a lot of these at least in Victoria. NSW and Queensland seems to always get the murder animals
Load More Replies...Well it’s official. Me and my arachnophobia are staying far far away from Australia
I live in England, and I love bugs, snakes and creepy-crawlies, but right now, I want to go and lock myself into an airtight room for the rest of my life.
i have lived in straya my whole life and never met half of these animals. i live out in woop woop and the only animals i see are the bogans
I love geocaching, especially in other countries, but I would not do this in Australia!
I start volunteering with my local zoo's LVI department soon (lower vertebrate and invertebrates) and thankfully we have none of these. Just 2 Caiman cross to worry about though. Here in the UK we have false black widows, not as deadly but still hurts ( as my sister just found out) but our shed has a few, luckily we saw them before we decided to clean it out, cuz it's a huge nope whilst they're in there
Florida is worse. Filled with snakes, spiders, roaches that fly! And they have this enormous insect called a "DeSantis" there's only one but he creates mindless carbons copies of himself and you really can't avoid it no matter what. I'd live for 1000 years in Australia before spending 1 minute in the cesspool that is Florida.
I'm terrified of spiders. Why did i click this article. I'd be fine with snakes, crocodiles, stick insects, and all that, but the spiders. nope. can't do it. I'm afraid I'll never get to go to Australia. ;-; (and to be honest the heat would also kill me)
very kewl I own 20 tarantulas as pets some there is no way id put my hands in their containers.
Where is a place in the world with the least amount of wildlife of any kind?
I would be happy to visit Australia, provided I can bring a flamethrower along. And this post hasn't even shown what's in the water yet, save for one bull shark post but even that was a case of flooding -_-"
Well, flamethrowers are illegal here... It's not really as bad as this makes it look.
Load More Replies...So what I'm getting is Australia has some reptiles and arachnids. Got it.
Haha! This thread is about terrestrial non mammal species. The birds, mammals then what's in the water as you desperately run away to the sea?
Eh... the only thing the U.S. doesn't have is the frogman kangaroo. We got huntsman, plus black widows... and brown recluses. And pythons? They're not even venomous! We've got rattlers, coral snakes, copperheads. We've got alligators AND crocodiles. And what we have instead of roos has head armor the size of a Toyota. Plus, ticks to kill you four different ways.
The USA has the scariest of them all: MAGA supporters. With guns.
Load More Replies...Because it's bloody hot and we don't do it when in the bush :)
Load More Replies...well 0.4% of Australians have vision impairments and usually that number is around 3 or 4% of a population so my guess is they just don't
Load More Replies...I'm glad I live in New Zealand where there is no dangerous animals (expect for humans)