
Mating begins between May
and August, and the eggs are laid in September. About twenty eggs are deposited
in abandoned megapode nests or in a self-dug nesting hole. The eggs are
incubated for seven to eight months, hatching in April, when insects are most
plentiful. Young Komodo dragons are vulnerable and therefore dwell in trees,
safe from predators and cannibalistic adults. They take about eight to nine
years to mature, and are estimated to live for up to 30 years. Komodo dragons
were first recorded by Western scientists in 1910. Their large size and
fearsome reputation make them popular zoo exhibits. In the wild their range has
contracted due to human activities and they are listed as vulnerable by the
IUCN. They are protected under Indonesian law, and a national park, Komodo
National Park, was founded to aid protection efforts.
Etymology
The Komodo dragon is also
known as the Komodo monitor or the Komodo Island monitor in scientific
literature, although this is not very common. To the natives of Komodo Island,
it is referred to as ora, buaya darat (land crocodile) or biawak raksasa (giant
monitor).
Evolutionary history

Description
In the wild, an adult
Komodo dragon usually weighs around 70 kilograms (150 lb), although captive
specimens often weigh more. The largest verified wild specimen was 3.13 metres
(10 ft 3 in) long and weighed 166 kilograms (370 lb), including undigested
food. The Komodo dragon has a tail as long as its body, as well as about 60
frequently replaced serrated teeth that can measure up to 2.5 centimetres (1
in) in length. Its saliva is frequently blood-tinged, because its teeth are
almost completely covered by gingival tissue that is naturally lacerated during
feeding. This creates an ideal culture for the bacteria that live in its mouth.
It also has a long, yellow, deeply forked tongue.
Senses

Ecology
The Komodo dragon prefers
hot and dry places, and typically lives in dry open grassland, savanna, and
tropical forest at low elevations. As an ectotherm, it is most active in the
day, although it exhibits some nocturnal activity. Komodo dragons are solitary,
coming together only to breed and eat. They are capable of running rapidly in
brief sprints up to 20 kilometres per hour (12 mph), diving up to 4.5 metres
(15 ft), and climbing trees proficiently when young through use of their strong
claws. To catch prey that is out of reach, the Komodo dragon may stand on its
hind legs and use its tail as a support. As the Komodo dragon matures, its
claws are used primarily as weapons, as its great size makes climbing
impractical. For shelter, the Komodo dragon digs holes that can measure from
1–3 metres (3–10 ft) wide with its powerful forelimbs and claws. Because of its
large size and habit of sleeping in these burrows, it is able to conserve body
heat throughout the night and minimize its basking period the morning after. The
Komodo dragon hunts in the afternoon, but stays in the shade during the hottest
part of the day. These special resting places, usually located on ridges with a
cool sea breeze, are marked with droppings and are cleared of vegetation. They
serve as a strategic location from which to ambush deer.
Diet

The largest animals eat
first, while the smaller ones follow a hierarchy. The largest male asserts his
dominance and the smaller males show their submission by use of body language
and rumbling hisses. Dragons of equal size may resort to "wrestling".
Losers usually retreat though they have been known to be killed and eaten by
victors. The Komodo dragon's diet is wide-ranging, and includes invertebrates,
other reptiles (including smaller Komodo dragons), birds, bird eggs, small
mammals, monkeys, wild boar, goats, deer, horses, and water buffalo. Young
Komodos will eat insects, eggs, geckos, and small mammals. Occasionally they
consume humans and human corpses, digging up bodies from shallow graves. This
habit of raiding graves caused the villagers of Komodo to move their graves
from sandy to clay ground and pile rocks on top of them to deter the lizards.
The Komodo dragon may have evolved to feed on the extinct dwarf elephant
Stegodon that once lived on Flores, according to evolutionary biologist Jared
Diamond. The Komodo dragon drinks by sucking water into its mouth via buccal
pumping (a process also used for respiration), lifting its head, and letting the
water run down its throat.
Saliva
Auffenberg described the
Komodo dragon as having septic pathogens in its saliva (he described the saliva
as "reddish and copious"), specifically the bacteria: E. coli,
Staphylococcus sp., Providencia sp., Proteus morgani and P. mirabilis. He noted
that while these pathogens can be found in the mouths of wild Komodo dragons,
they disappear from the mouths of captive animals, due to a cleaner diet and
the use of antibiotics. This was verified by taking mucous samples from the
external gum surface of the upper jaw of two freshly captured individuals. Saliva
samples were analyzed by researchers at the University of Texas who found 57
strains of bacteria growing in the mouths of three wild Komodo dragons
including Pasteurella multocida. The rapid growth of these bacteria was noted
by Fredeking: "Normally it takes about three days for a sample of P.
multocida to cover a petri dish; ours took eight hours. We were very taken
aback by how virulent these strains were". This study supported the
observation that wounds inflicted by the Komodo dragon are often associated
with sepsis and subsequent infections in prey animals. How the Komodo dragon is
unaffected by these virulent bacteria remains a mystery. In late 2005,
researchers at the University of Melbourne speculated that the perentie
(Varanus giganteus), other species of monitor, and agamids may be somewhat
venomous. The team believes that the immediate effects of bites from these
lizards were caused by mild envenomation. Bites on human digits by a lace
monitor (V. varius), a Komodo dragon, and a spotted tree monitor (V. scalaris)
all produced similar effects: rapid swelling, localized disruption of blood
clotting, and shooting pain up to the elbow, with some symptoms lasting for
several hours.
In 2009, the same
researchers published further evidence demonstrating that Komodo dragons
possess a venomous bite. MRI scans of a preserved skull showed the presence of
two venom glands in the lower jaw. They extracted one of these glands from the
head of a terminally ill specimen in the Singapore Zoological Gardens, and
found that it secreted a venom containing several different toxic proteins. The
known functions of these proteins include inhibition of blood clotting,
lowering of blood pressure, muscle paralysis, and the induction of hypothermia,
leading to shock and loss of consciousness in envenomated prey. As a result of
the discovery, the previous theory that bacteria were responsible for the
deaths of Komodo victims was disputed. Kurt Schwenk, an evolutionary biologist
at the University of Connecticut, finds the discovery of these glands
intriguing, but considers most of the evidence for venom in the study to be
"meaningless, irrelevant, incorrect or falsely misleading". Even if
the lizards have venomlike proteins in their mouths, Schwenk argues, they may
be using them for a different function, and he doubts that venom is necessary
to explain the effect of a Komodo dragon bite, arguing that shock and blood
loss are the primary factors.
Reproduction
Mating occurs between May
and August, with the eggs laid in September. During this period, males fight
over females and territory by grappling with one another upon their hind legs
with the loser eventually being pinned to the ground. These males may vomit or
defecate when preparing for the fight. The winner of the fight will then flick
his long tongue at the female to gain information about her receptivity.
Females are antagonistic and resist with their claws and teeth during the early
phases of courtship. Therefore, the male must fully restrain the female during
coitus to avoid being hurt. Other courtship displays include males rubbing
their chins on the female, hard scratches to the back, and licking. Copulation
occurs when the male inserts one of his hemipenes into the female's cloaca.
Komodo dragons may be monogamous and form "pair bonds", a rare
behavior for lizards. The female lays her eggs in burrows cut into the side of
a hill or in the abandoned nesting mounds of the Orange-footed Scrubfowl (a
moundbuilder or megapode), with a preference for the abandoned mounds. Clutches
contain an average of 20 eggs which have an incubation period of 7–8 months.
Hatching is an exhausting effort for the neonates, who break out of their
eggshells with an egg tooth that falls off soon after. After cutting out the
hatchlings may lie in their eggshells for hours before starting to dig out of
the nest. They are born quite defenseless, and many are eaten by predators. Young
Komodo dragons spend much of their first few years in trees, where they are
relatively safe from predators, including cannibalistic adults, who make
juvenile dragons 10% of their diet. According to David Attenborough, the habit
of cannibalism may be advantageous in sustaining the large size of adults, as
medium-sized prey on the islands is rare. When the young must approach a kill,
they roll around in fecal matter and rest in the intestines of eviscerated
animals to deter these hungry adults. Komodo dragons take about three to five
years to mature, and may live for up to 50 years.
Parthenogenesis

Komodo dragons have the
ZW chromosomal sex-determination system, as opposed to the mammalian XY system.
Male progeny prove that Flora's unfertilized eggs were haploid (n) and doubled
their chromosomes later to become diploid (2n) (by being fertilized by a polar
body, or by chromosome duplication without cell division), rather than by her
laying diploid eggs by one of the meiosis reduction-divisions in her ovaries
failing. When a female Komodo dragon (with ZW sex chromosomes) reproduces in
this manner, she provides her progeny with only one chromosome from each of her
pairs of chromosomes, including only one of her two sex chromosomes. This
single set of chromosomes is duplicated in the egg, which develops
parthenogenetically. Eggs receiving a Z chromosome become ZZ (male); those
receiving a W chromosome become WW and fail to develop.
It has been hypothesized
that this reproductive adaptation allows a single female to enter an isolated
ecological niche (such as an island) and by parthenogenesis produce male
offspring, thereby establishing a sexually reproducing population (via
reproduction with her offspring that can result in both male and female young).
Despite the advantages of such an adaptation, zoos are cautioned that
parthenogenesis may be detrimental to genetic diversity.
History
(Discovery by the
Western world)
Komodo dragons were first
documented by Europeans in 1910, when rumors of a "land crocodile"
reached Lieutenant van Steyn van Hensbroek of the Dutch colonial
administration. Widespread notoriety came after 1912, when Peter Ouwens, the
director of the Zoological Museum at Bogor, Java, published a paper on the
topic after receiving a photo and a skin from the lieutenant, as well as two
other specimens from a collector. Later, the Komodo dragon was the driving
factor for an expedition to Komodo Island by W. Douglas Burden in 1926. After
returning with 12 preserved specimens and 2 live ones, this expedition provided
the inspiration for the 1933 movie King Kong. It was also Burden who coined the
common name "Komodo dragon." Three of his specimens were stuffed and
are still on display in the American Museum of Natural History.
Studies
The Dutch, realizing the
limited number of individuals in the wild, outlawed sport hunting and heavily
limited the number of individuals taken for scientific study. Collecting
expeditions ground to a halt with the occurrence of World War II, not resuming
until the 1950s and 1960s, when studies examined the Komodo dragon's feeding
behavior, reproduction, and body temperature. At around this time, an
expedition was planned in which a long-term study of the Komodo dragon would be
undertaken. This task was given to the Auffenberg family, who stayed on Komodo
Island for 11 months in 1969. During their stay, Walter Auffenberg and his
assistant Putra Sastrawan captured and tagged more than 50 Komodo dragons. The
research from the Auffenberg expedition would prove to be enormously
influential in raising Komodo dragons in captivity. Research after the
Auffenberg family has shed more light on the nature of the Komodo dragon, with
biologists such as Claudio Ciofi continuing to study the creatures.
Conservation
The Komodo dragon is a
vulnerable species and is found on the IUCN Red List. There are approximately
4,000 to 5,000 living Komodo dragons in the wild. Their populations are
restricted to the islands of Gili Motang (100), Gili Dasami (100), Rinca
(1,300), Komodo (1,700), and Flores (perhaps 2,000).[50] However, there are
concerns that there may presently be only 350 breeding females. To address
these concerns, the Komodo National Park was founded in 1980 to protect Komodo
dragon populations on islands including Komodo, Rinca, and Padar. Later, the
Wae Wuul and Wolo Tado Reserves were opened on Flores to aid with Komodo dragon
conservation. Komodo dragons avoid encounters with humans. Juveniles are very
shy and will flee quickly into a hideout if a human comes closer than about 100
metres (330 ft). Older animals will also retreat from humans from a shorter
distance away. If cornered, they will react aggressively by gaping their mouth,
hissing, and swinging their tail. If they are disturbed further, they may start
an attack and bite. Although there are anecdotes of unprovoked Komodo dragons
attacking or preying on humans, most of these reports are either not reputable
or caused by defensive bites. Only a very few cases are truly the result of
unprovoked attacks by abnormal individuals which lost their fear towards
humans.

In captivity


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