The country is also home to the world’s most famous coral reef system: the Great Barrier Reef. This diverse ecosystem covers more than 134,000 square miles and, in some parts, descends to 2,000 metres deep. How many deadly species can be found in its waters? Here are 10 of the deadliest species that can be found on the Great Barrier Reef and how worried you should be about encountering them……Continue reading….

By: Melissa Hobson

Source: Discover Wild Life

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Critics:

The mosquito is technically the world’s most dangerous species, killing over 725,000 to 1,000,000 people annually by transmitting deadly diseases like malaria, dengue fever, and Zika virus. However, from a broader ecological and direct-harm perspective, humans rank as the second deadliest, taking approximately 400,000 lives every year through interpersonal violence and homicide.

If you are considering marine environments, the Great White Shark or the Box Jellyfish are often cited as the most dangerous creatures in the water. However, the Indo-Pacific Stonefish is considered one of the most lethal “silent assassins,” with spines that can inject fatal venom if stepped on.Venomous arthropods include spiders, which use fangs on their chelicerae to inject venom, and centipedes, which use forcipules — modified legs — to deliver venom, while scorpions and stinging insects inject venom with a sting.

In bees and wasps, the stinger is a modified ovipositor (egg-laying device). In Polistes fuscatus, the female continuously releases a venom that contains a sex pheromone that induces copulatory behavior in males. In wasps such as Polistes exclamans, venom is used as an alarm pheromone, coordinating a response from the nest and attracting nearby wasps to attack the predator. In some species, such as Parischnogaster striatula, venom is applied all over the body as an antimicrobial protection.

Many caterpillars have defensive venom glands associated with specialized bristles on the body called urticating hairs. These are usually merely irritating, but those of the Lonomia moth can be fatal to humans. Bees synthesize and employ an acidic venom (apitoxin) to defend their hives and food stores, whereas wasps use a chemically different venom to paralyse prey, so their prey remains alive to provision the food chambers of their young.

The use of venom is much more widespread than just these examples; many other insects, such as true bugs and many ants, also produce venom. The ant species Polyrhachis dives uses venom topically for the sterilisation of pathogensThere are venomous invertebrates in several phyla, including jellyfish such as the dangerous box jellyfish, the Portuguese man-of-war (a siphonophore) and sea anemones among the Cnidaria, sea urchins among the Echinodermata, and cone snails and cephalopods, including octopuses, among the Molluscs.

Some 450 species of snake are venomous. Snake venom is produced by glands below the eye (the mandibular glands) and delivered to the target through tubular or channeled fangs. Snake venoms contain a variety of peptide toxins, including proteases, which hydrolyze protein peptide bonds; nucleases, which hydrolyze the phosphodiester bonds of DNA; and neurotoxins, which disrupt signalling in the nervous system.

Snake venom causes symptoms including pain, swelling, tissue necrosis, low blood pressure, convulsions, haemorrhage (varying by species of snake), respiratory paralysis, kidney failure, coma, and death.  Snake venom may have originated with duplication of genes that had been expressed in the salivary glands of ancestors. Venom is found in a few other reptiles such as the Mexican beaded lizard, the gila monster, and some monitor lizards, including the Komodo dragon.

Mass spectrometry showed that the mixture of proteins present in their venom is as complex as the mixture of proteins found in snake venom. Some lizards possess a venom gland; they form a hypothetical clade, Toxicofera, containing the suborders Serpentes and Iguania and the families Varanidae, Anguidae, and Helodermatidae.

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