About UsContact UsNewsroomMembershipJobs/Volunteer   Search
Minnesota Zoo
Guests
Education
Animals
Minnesota Trail
Northern Trail
Tropics Trail
Discovery Bay
Family Farm
Animal Cams
Map of the Zoo
Conservation
     
Komodo Monitor

Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Varanidae
Genus: Varanus
Species: komodoensis

Animal Search A-Z

   
 

KOMODO MONITOR CONTINUED

Range and Habitat: Komodo monitors are found on the three small Indonesian islands of Komodo, Rinca and the western end of Flores. Komodo monitors inhabit areas that are commonly hot and dry for much of the year, but are subjected to a short monsoon season during which most of the year's 35 inches of rain occurs. Preferred vegetation can vary from dry open grasslands and savannas, to tropical forests at lower elevations.

Habits and Adaptations:: Young monitors are well adapted to their arboreal life where their coloration is a useful camouflage and the slender body, long tail and sharp claws enable them to move through the trees. As they become older, the coloration changes as does the body confirmation and many of the daily habits. They eventually become terrestrial where they become more interactive with other Komodos and change feeding habits to larger prey and carrion.

Komodos live in a very hot and dry environment. They prefer a body temperature of approximately 97 degrees Fahrenheit and much of their time is spent thermoregulating to achieve and maintain that temperature. They will seek out warm areas in the morning, cool areas during the hottest parts of the day and may burrow for the night to minimize body heat loss overnight.

Komodo monitors have 60 teeth that are shed and replaced much like shark teeth. The teeth are flattened and serrated so that they are very effective for cutting through food items.

Diet: Young monitors will feed on arboreal lizards and insects. As they grow and become more terrestrial, they will prey opportunistically on most anything available, from rodents and snakes to birds and their eggs. Large monitors feed on goats, deer, boar and even 1000 pound water buffalo. Large prey are often sick or older animals that may be weak. Komodos often ambush their prey by hiding along game trails. Some prey are injured by the hunting monitors, later die and are then consumed as carrion. Komodos are cannibalistic, so smaller individuals are occasionally eaten by larger ones. There are cases of humans being consumed or killed by Komodo monitors.

Breeding and Maturation: In the wild, Komodo monitors will lay eggs during the dry months of July through September. Nests are dug in the ground, covered and left unguarded to incubate for 8 or 9 months. Little is known from the wild, however, four clutches of eggs produced at National and Cincinnati Zoos have ranged from 24 to 29 eggs. Eggs incubated artificially have been hatched at approximately 210 days, when kept at 29.5 degrees Celsius. The young monitors are born approximately 15 to 18 inches long and, in captivity, have reached lengths of more that 4 feet by two years of age. It is estimated that Komodos mature at about 5-6 years of age.

Although their natural lifespan is unknown, Komodos in captivity have survived for as long as 20 years. Many large reptiles are long lived, however, and the Komodo monitor's lifespan in the wild has been estimated at approximately 50 years.

Miscellaneous: Like snakes, monitors have a sensory organ in the roof of their mouths known as the Jacobson's organ, which is used to smell. The tongue is used to transfer the smell to the organ. Komodos are capable of sensing carrion from long distances with this system. The jaws of the dragon are capable of stretching and unhinging to enable them to eat large prey, again, much like the snake. If possible, the prey is consumed whole. When it's too large, the meat will be torn and cut into manageable sized bites and swallowed. Komodos are able to eat 80 percent of their empty body weight at one large feeding.

Komodo monitors, also known as Komodo dragons or oras, occur in a very small area of approximately 400 square miles. This limited range puts the population of perhaps 5000 at risk from human encroachment and poaching. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has classified Komodo monitors as an endangered species and there is now an area designated as Komodo National Park where the animals are protected.

 

 

Minnesota TrailNorthern TrailTropics TrailDiscovery BayFamily Farm