Not indefinitely. While a Komodo dragon can live longer than a human can without food, they still need to eat occasionally.
Up to 30 years
13
Yes, wild boar (wild pigs) are a part of the diet of the Komodo dragon.
Komodo dragons are believed to have a life span of 30-60 years. Females live for an average of 32 years, while males live up to 60 years. This is because females expend so much energy producing eggs, making huge nests, and guarding the eggs for 6 months.
The komodo dragon is alive and well, although classified as vulnerable. It is not extinct. Komodo dragons are found on a small number of islands of central Indonesia, including Komodo, Rinca, Flores and Gili Motang. They are carnivorous lizards, feeding on live, large prey such as water buffalo, monkeys, goats, snakes and wild boar, and also scavenging on carrion, or dead animals.
The entire population of wild Komodo dragons exists in Indonesia, on the volcanic Lesser Sunda Islands: Flores, Gili, Komodo, Montang, Padar, and Rinca. The smallest of these islands are Gili, Montang and Padar. The majority are to be found on Komodo. Padar has had no permanent residents since l984, when a fire decimated the island's prey base.
komodo island, indoneseia
none there not up for sale no animal of the wild like that as in size is sold
Yes. The Komodo Dragon is not a farm animal and it is not domesticated or a pet, so it is a wild animal.
for my homework i put: - wild - muscular - deadly - stealthy - deadly - powerful - dangerous
Komodo dragons eat deer, wild pigs, domestic animals, dogs, tigers, buffalos, monitor lizards, pythons, and small crocodiles.
A komodo dragon is able to swallow a full grown deer, so it could most likely eat a small child easily. Komodo dragons also have a poisonous saliva on their tongues. Any wild animal is harmful to humans and we need to be extremely cautious when we see one.
For a Komodo Dragon the worse meal would be fruits and vegetables. This type of animal is a meat eater and is known to eat wild pigs and even buffalo.
4000-5000 in the wild. There are about 300 in captivity.