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Fun Photo Friday — Komodo Favorites 2


Inviting Beach Where YOU are on the Menu!

Next week it’s time to move on to what was our next Indonesia destination. Until then, here is today’s Fun Photo Friday of Komodo favorites:

Komodo Commuter Parking Lot
Mushroom on Komodo
Komodo Beauty
Komodo Dragon Sneaking Up on Me

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Filed under Fun Photo Friday, Photography, R. Doug Wicker, travel, vacation

Indonesia — Komodo; Watch Your Step, Dragons are Everywhere!


Komodo dragon on the prowl

I‘ve touched upon Komodo’s beauty several times during this two-week series, but let’s face it — tropical beauty is not the draw here. Danger is. And that danger is represented by the largest lizard on the planet, the Komodo dragon. This apex predator is powerful, venomous, ruthless (it will even snack on its own young), crafty, patient, stealthy, and just plain deadly. So, today I’m going to shut up and let the star of the show entertain you. As always, just click on any image below to enlarge that image and engage today’s slide show:

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Indonesia — Komodo; Dragon Mounds


Komodo — Land of Dragons

The Indonesian island of Komodo is home to a very special species of monitor lizard. Monitors are the native to Africa, the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent, and Oceana clear down to Australia, although one the West African Nile monitor has gotten a foothold here in the U.S. due to irresponsible pet ownership.

A very special… and LARGE… monitor lizard

But out of the eighty or so species of monitors, one in particular stands out because of its immense size. The largest monitor on the planet is the Komodo dragon of Indonesia. This patient killer comes equipped with a venomous bite that seldom kills its prey outright. The venom prevents blood clotting, which leads the victim to eventually go into shock from blood loss. So the Komodo dragon stalks patiently after injecting the venom, as well as a toxic stew of bacteria, waiting for the victim to succumb.

Not as friendly as it appears

If all this sounds new to you, there’s a reason for that. Up until as recently as 2009 it was believed that bacteria from the mouth of the Komodo dragon was sole reason its prey succumbed to the dragon’s bite. I remember reading that when I was very young. This belief changed when glands in the lower mouth were discovered. Analysis of these glands revealed that they secret an anticoagulant protein into the dragon’s saliva. But debate rages as to which kills you first — blood loss from that anticoagulant, or blood loss from the trauma caused by this lizard’s sixty huge, serrated, scimitar-shaped teeth. Or perhaps the old texts had it right all along, and it’s just that toxic brew of bacteria feeding on the rotting flesh wedged between all those teeth that’ll cause you to eventually keel over.

Dragons on the prowl

These giant, venous lizards have other tricks up their scaly sleeves, as well. As is common among many lizards and snake, the Komodo dragon possesses a very sensitive sense of smell. Or, to be bit more precise, they taste the air around them. This sense is finely tuned that the dragon track its dead prey up to nearly 6 miles/9.5km away. Patient little (?) beast.

Same dragon now tasting me from a distance as he gives me the eye

Komodo dragons won’t make parents of the year. They are cannibalistic toward younger dragons. This prompts mom to find a place to hide her eggs and give the young’uns a fighting chance after they emerge. Dragons bury their eggs in large mounds, and frequently those mounds are recycled nests of the orange-footed scrubfowl. These birds build nesting mounds that can measure as much as 15 feet/4.5 meters tall and stretch up to 30 feet/9 meters across.

Komodo dragon nesting mound
Orange-footed scrubfowl nest now used as a dragon nursery

Of course, Komodo isn’t all about deadly lizards. It also has its beautiful side:

Komodo beach

Just beware that death may await those who venture further inland:

Lurking in the green…
… or not even trying to hide

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