The Komodo dragon, as befits any creature evoking a mythological
beast, has many names. It is also the Komodo monitor, being
a member of the monitor lizard family, Varanidae, which
today has one genus, Varanus. Residents of the island of
Komodo call it the ora. Among some on Komodo and the islands
of Rinca and Flores, it is buaya darat (land crocodile),
a name that is descriptive but inaccurate; monitors are
not crocodilians.
Others call it biawak raksasa (giant monitor), which is
quite correct; it ranks as the largest of the monitor lizards,
a necessary logical consequence of its standing as the largest
lizard of any kind now living on the earth…. Within
the scientific community, the dragon is Varanus komodoensis.
And most everyone calls it simply the Komodo.” Claudio
Ciofi. The Komodo dragon is an ancient species whose ancestors
date back over 100 million years. The varanid genus originated
between 25 and 40 million years ago in Asia. The Komodo
descended from this species and evolved to its present form
over four million years ago.
The Komodo is long lived (as are most of the larger reptilian
species) with an estimated life expectancy of over 50 years
in the wild. In keeping with its longevity, the Komodo matures
late in life, becoming sexually viable at five to seven
years, and achieving maximum body density in fifteen years.
Komodos are sexually dimorphous, which means males are bigger
than females. The largest recorded specimen was 3.13 meters
in length and was undoubtedly a male. Females rarely exceed
2.5 meters in length. What is perhaps more important, is
that the characteristic bulk is achieved by older dominant
males in clearly delineated territorial areas. As an adult
Komodo can consume up to 80% of its body weight in one gorging,
weight is a highly variable factor, and is largely dependent
on the most recent feeding. A typical weight for an adult
Komodo in the wild is 70 kilograms.
Komodo dragons are first and foremost opportunistic carnivores,
and predators second. Although the Komodo can sprint briefly
at 20 kilometers an hour, it does not chase down game as
do the larger mammalian predators. The Komodo is a stealth
predator, which lies motionless and camoflouged alongside
game trails for the unwary, which tend to be the very young,
the old and the infirm. In an attack, the Komodo lunges
at its victim with blinding speed and clasps it with the
serrated teeth of the jaw. Prey are rarely downed in the
initial attack unless the neck is broken or caratoid artery
severed. The more likely outcome is escape, followed by
death a few hours or days later from septicemia introduced
by the virulent strains of bacteria found in the saliva
of the Komodo dragon (the Komodo survive primarily on carrion
and ingest the bacteria when feeding).
The Komodo has two highly developed sensory organs –
the olefactory and the Jacobson’s - which allow the
dragon to detect rotting carcasses from distances as great
as 10 kilometers. The yellow forked tongue is constantly
being flicked in and out of the mouth, “tasting the
air”, and inserted into the Jacobson’s organ
located in the roof of the mouth. The individual tips are
highly sensitive and are capable of discriminating odors
in the magnitude of millionths of a part. Using the information
garnered, the dragon wends in a seemingly random, winding
path which becomes straighter the closer it approaches to
the carrion. The Komodo is typically a communal feeder and
any number of dragons might arrive at the site of the carcass.
Socialization occurs during feeding at carrion sites, as
does mating. The abdomen is slashed first and the intestines
and stomach contents scattered. Young juveniles roll in
the fecal matter to mask their scent from aggressive adults,
which attack and sometimes kill juveniles during feeding.
The dominant male feeds until sated, followed by other dragons
in order of size. While the dominant male is gulping down
hindquarters and ribcages, the braver dragons chance foraging
a few scraps. Virtually the entire carcass is consumed in
the process– head, fur, hooves and bones. After feeding,
the Komodos become quiescent and approachable while their
digestive tracts are converting the food into fat energy
stored in the tail.
Between the months of May and August, mating occurs at
and around feeding sites. As males outnumber females in
a ratio of nearly four to one, the dominant male must fend
off other suitors before mating. Males will engage in slashing,
biting and bipedular rearing onto the tail, until the dominant
male is acknowledged by displays of subservience and the
vanquished flees. The female is forced into a prone position
while the male tongue flicks her body, and in particular,
the fold between the torso and the rear leg close to the
cloaca. With Komodos, the male hemipenes are located here
as are the female genetalia. Once prone, the male mounts
onto the back of the female and inserts one of the two hemipenes
into her cloaca , depending on which side he is perched.
The month of September is when a clutch of 15-30 eggs is
buried in a nest dug with the powerful claws of the female
dragon. A typical nesting site is in the composting vegetative
mounds of the maleo birds which are indigenous to Komodo.
The gestation period for the eggs is eight to nine months.
Hatchlings, which average 40 centimeters in length and weigh
100 grams, emerge from the nest in April and immediately
scramble up the nearest tree to avoid being eaten by the
adults. There are plenty of small lizards, insects and mammals
in the canopy after the brief rainy season in January and
February to sustain the juveniles until they descend to
the forest floor roughly a year later. This period of change
between an arboreal and a terrestial habitat, when the juveniles
are a meter in length, is a time fraught with danger. The
juvenile Komodo is just too bulky to safely ascend many
trees, and not big enough to outrun a ravenous and determined
adult. Cannibalism is a fact of life for this species, and
perhaps is an evolutionary response to the harsh, arid climate
of Komodo.
Prey species for the dragon on Komodo island include deer,
boar, wild buffalo, the male bird, snakes, reptiles and
small mammals. On Rinca, the monkeys and wild horses found
there are also constitute prey, as do the goats raised by
the local people. On the odd occasion people are also attacked
by the Komodo dragon. There have been eight recorded instances
of attacks on humans since Komodo has become a national
park, almost all of which occurred on Rinca.