35K : 10 deadliest insects: Discover the world’s most dangerous insects to humans

There are plenty of contenders for the top 10 deadliest insects in the world. Forget great white sharks and grizzly bears, insects are actually the most dangerous group of animals in the world to humans.

This is in a large part due to their proficiency at carrying and spreading deadly diseases, from malaria to the black death.

Many species of insect feed on vertebrate blood, putting them in a prime position to carry nasty bacteria, viruses, and parasites from victim to victim, and often from animal to human.

This list of deadly insects will cover such disease carriers, as well as those that can kill through toxic stings and bites, and even by destroying our crops.

Insects have been implicated in major history-defining events, from devastating plagues to colonial expansions, and their effects have shaped our own human evolution. Size really can be deceptive.

Read on to find out more about the world’s deadliest insects.

10 deadliest insects

10 Blister beetles (Meloidae family)

Kicking off our list of deadliest insects, in 10th place, is the blister beetle. This has the potential to be deadly to humans, but in reality, is not, as you would have to eat quite a few of them.

What they are more likely to kill are horses, as they can get mixed up into the hay or alfalfa they eat.

Blister beetles secrete a toxin (and defensive agent) called cantharidin, which causes skin blistering in humans. It has however been used in the past as a folk medicine, thought to be effective against warts and even rabies, but most commonly as an aphrodisiac.

In the past, it has been a major ingredient in “love potions”. This was a risky business, however, as the toxin can still kill in high enough quantities. In the 1950s a man was imprisoned for the deaths of two women whom he had given cantharidin-laced candies to in order to seduce them.

9. Locusts (Acrididae family)

© Getty Images

Locusts themselves are not particularly scary or dangerous, it is after all just a type of grasshopper, but their effects certainly can be. This is because in special circumstances they can gather in numbers of a biblical scale, moving across landscapes engulfing fields and devastating crops in a matter of minutes.

These swarming phases, which turn the normally solitary insect into a mass of millions, are triggered by a dry spell followed by rapid rainfall and vegetation growth. The drought forces them together onto the remaining areas of vegetation and the rainfall and subsequent abundance of food allows them to breed rapidly – creating a perfect storm. The major agricultural damage such swarms can cause can lead to famine and consequently many human fatalities.

8. Assassin caterpillar (Lonomia obliqua)

© Centro de Informações Toxicológicas de Santa Catarina, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

In eighth place is the fabulously named Assassin caterpillar. Although its name perhaps overstates the kill count of this caterpillar, it is responsible for a number of fatalities. The larval stage of the giant silkworm moth, this caterpillar is known as the world’s deadliest.

Its toxicity comes from its venom-injecting bristles that function as a defence mechanism against predators. The venom is stored in a sac at the base of each hollow bristle and when a bristle punctures the skin of a victim the venom flows through. The toxins have anti-coagulant properties, disrupting blood’s ability to clot properly. Symptoms include a burning sensation, vomiting, kidney failure, internal bleeding, and in rare cases, death.

7. Fire ants (Solenopsis genus)

A deadly insect
© Getty Images

Another group of insects that can cause human fatalities through anaphylaxis are the fearsome fire ants – . Members of the genus Solenopsis, which contains over 200 species, these stinging ants clamp down onto the skin of their victim and inject a powerful and painful venom, which some people are deathly allergic to. For most people, however, the worst you will experience is a burning sensation and raised pustules at the sting site.

6. Asian giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia)

© Yasunori Koide, CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Also alarmingly known as the “murder hornet”, the world’s biggest species of wasp has caused alarm in recent years, due to (thus far unfounded) fears that it could become an established invasive species in the UK and USA.

The reason for its brutal moniker is it’s perceived aggressiveness, and although it is true that they can be dangerous to humans -for the same reason that honeybees are- it is not people they are likely to murder, but bees.

These hornets feed on other insects and have an astonishing capacity to decimate whole hives of honeybees. They kill off the worker bees until the workforce is severely depleted and then enter the hive and take the larvae too.

It’s not to be confused with Asian hornets

5. Bees and wasps

© Getty Images

Outside of disease carriers, there are actually very few insects that are dangerous, venomous, or poisonous enough to be fatal to humans. One group of deadly insects that are responsible for numerous fatalities however is Hymenoptera – the order that includes bees, wasps, and ants. If you are unlucky enough to be one of the small percentage of people that have have an anaphylactic allergic reaction, bee stings can in rare cases be fatal.

Every year in the UK there around ten reported deaths from wasp or bee sting reactions.

4. Kissing bugs (Triatominae subfamily)

© CC BY-SA 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/, via Wikimedia Commons

In fourth place are the deceptively friendly-named kissing bugs. Members of the Triatominae subfamily of insects, kissing bugs are found mostly in the Americas, but also in smaller numbers in parts of Africa and Asia.

Like the other disease carriers on this list, they feed on vertebrate blood, and as such are primed to pass bacteria, viruses and parasites between unfortunate food sources. In this case, the disease-agent of significance is the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which causes a nasty illness called Chagas disease. Chagas disease infects about 6­–7 million people globally and causes approximately 10,000 deaths per year.

3. Fleas (Siphonaptera genus)

© Getty Images

When we are talking about deadly insects that are carriers of sickness and death we mustn’t forget the humble flea, perhaps the most famous historical example of a disease vector. In transmitting the bubonic plague from infected rodents to humans fleas were responsible for killing more than 25 million people in 14th century Europe.

In fact, fleas are such effective disease carriers that they have even been used in biological warfare. During WW2 the Japanese army air-dropped plague-infected fleas on Chinese cities.

Learn how fleas jump.

2. Tsetse fly (Glossingenus)

© Getty Images

In second place on the deadliest insect list is the Tsetse fly – another tiny animal with a history-making significance. It has been implicated in inhibiting human settlement in vast swathes of Africa and slowing the march of European colonialism into the continent.

This is because it carries a deadly disease called sleeping sickness. Like malaria, it is transmitted by a bite and caused by a single-celled parasite. Symptoms involve fever, severe headaches, seizures, and disruption of the sleep cycle (hence the name), and without treatment, it is often fatal.

1. Mosquito (Anopheles genus)

© Getty Images

The title of deadliest insect in the world goes to the mosquito – which probably is no surprise. It may be a small animal but it has a gigantic impact. Not only are mosquitos responsible for more human fatalities a year than any other animal (including ourselves) but their effects have shaped human history, precipitating the rise and fall of colonies and empires.

It is however not the mosquitos themselves that are deadly, but the parasites, bacteria, and viruses they carry and pass on through their bite. Mosquitos as a whole transmit a whole host of deadly diseases from yellow to dengue fever, but the one with the highest death toll is malaria, which is transmitted only by females of the Anopheles genus. Malaria, a disease caused by a blood-borne single-celled parasite, claimed an estimated 619,000 human lives in 2021.

We named the mosquito one of the most

Leoma Williams

Animal behavior researcher and science writer

Leoma Williams is an animal behavior researcher and science writer. She is currently studying for a PhD at the University of Manchester, investigating the evolution of sociality in primates, with a focus on cooperation in monkeys and apes, as well as studying social birds such as ravens. In autumn 2019, she was an editorial intern at BBC Wildlife, writing news articles, fact-files, and quizzes for the website, as well as news articles for the magazine. She now writes periodically for both the website and print magazine, mostly as a frequent ‘ask an expert’ in the Q&A section, answering questions like “Can other animals lie?” and “Is trade unique to humans?”. She is interested in figuring out how animals think and interact, and what guides their behavior. In her spare time she can be found cooking, painting, and talking to her cat.

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