Eating a buffalo. Yum! Photo by Kevin Flay |
Photo by Kenneth Garrett |
Komodo dragon skin |
The way a Komodo dragon keeps breathing while it is swallowing something big is that it uses a little tube under his tongue to get air to its lungs. After it finishes swallowing its food, which might be up to 80% of its body weight, the dragon waddles off to sit in the sun, because warmth will help make the digestion go faster. If the food takes too long to digest, it could rot and poison the dragon. When the good parts have been digested, the lizard regurgitates something called a gastric pellet, which contains a bunch of horns, hair, and teeth, covered with some really stinky mucous. Komodo dragons have such a slow metabolism that a large dragon can get by on only twelve meals a year.
The favorite kinds of places where these dragons like to live is in dry, open grassland, savannas, and tropic forests at low elevations. They dig large holes to sleep in, and they are mostly only active during the daytime. In the very hottest part of the day, they hang out in the shade where there is a nice breeze. Komodo dragons stay by themselves a lot of the time, unless it's mating season, which is between May and August.
During this time, the males fight over the females by standing on their hind legs and wrestling. The winner pins the loser on the ground. After mating, the female dragon lays about 20 eggs in a burrow that she digs in the side of a hill or else in the abandoned nesting mound of an Orange-footed Scrubfowl. Seven or eight months later, the baby dragons start to think about coming out of their shells. It's a tough job to get out, and they have to use an egg tooth to cut through the shells. Sometimes they need to rest up for a few hours before they can then dig out of their nests.
An Indonesian coin |
In 1910, Lieutenant van Steyn van Hensbroek, who was part of the Dutch colonial adminstration, was the first European to discover see Komodo dragons. He sent a photo and dragon skin to Peter Ouwens, the director of the Zoological Museum at Bogor, Java, who published a paper on the dragon. Then in 1926, W. Douglas Burden went on an expedition to Komodo Island to study the lizards. He returned to the U.S. with 12 preserved specimens and 2 live ones, and he also invented the phrase "Komodo dragon." It was Mr. Burden's expedition that gave filmmakers the idea for the 1933 movie King Kong.
Here's a map that shows where Komodo dragons live |
Today there are between 3,000 and 5,000 Komodo dragons left in Indonesia. This population is stable, but it is considered to be ENDANGERED because of the problems of poaching, natural disasters, loss of habitat, and not enough females who are laying eggs.
Personally, I would not ever want to meet up with a Komodo dragon because I would not want to get bitten by a mouthful of sharp teeth and bacteria. And I especially wouldn't want to be swallowed whole!
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