iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Komodo Dragon Attacks In Indonesia Terrorizing Villages

IRWAN FIRDAUS   05/24/09 10:04 PM ET   AP

Komodo Dragons

KOMODO ISLAND, Indonesia — Komodo dragons have shark-like teeth and poisonous venom that can kill a person within hours of a bite. Yet villagers who have lived for generations alongside the world's largest lizard were not afraid _ until the dragons started to attack.

The stories spread quickly across this smattering of tropical islands in southeastern Indonesia, the only place the endangered reptiles can still be found in the wild: Two people were killed since 2007 _ a young boy and a fisherman _ and others were badly wounded after being charged unprovoked.

Komodo dragon attacks are still rare, experts note. But fear is swirling through the fishing villages, along with questions on how best to live with the dragons in the future.

Main, a 46-year-old park ranger, who like many Indonesians goes by a single name, was doing paperwork when a dragon slithered up the stairs of his wooden hut in Komodo National Park and went for his ankles dangling beneath the desk. When the ranger tried to pry open the beast's powerful jaws, it locked its teeth into his hand.

"I thought I wouldn't survive... I've spent half my life working with Komodos and have never seen anything like it," said Main, pointing to his jagged gashes, sewn up with 55 stitches and still swollen three months later. "Luckily, my friends heard my screams and got me to hospital in time."

Komodos, which are popular at zoos in the United States to Europe, grow to be 10 feet (3 meters) long and 150 pounds (70 kilograms). All of the estimated 2,500 left in the wild can be found within the 700-square-mile (1,810-square-kilometer) Komodo National Park, mostly on its two largest islands, Komodo and Rinca. The lizards on neighboring Padar were wiped out in the 1980s when hunters killed their main prey, deer.

Though poaching is illegal, the sheer size of the park _ and a shortage of rangers _ makes it almost impossible to patrol, said Heru Rudiharto, a biologist and reptile expert. Villagers say the dragons are hungry and more aggressive toward humans because their food is being poached, though park officials are quick to disagree.

The giant lizards have always been dangerous, said Rudiharto. However tame they may appear, lounging beneath trees and gazing at the sea from white-sand beaches, they are fast, strong and deadly.

The animals are believed to have descended from a larger lizard on Indonesia's main island Java or Australia around 30,000 years ago. They can reach speeds of up to 18 miles (nearly 30 kilometers) per hour, their legs winding around their low, square shoulders like egg beaters.

When they catch their prey, they carry out a frenzied biting spree that releases venom, according to a new study this month in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The authors, who used surgically excised glands from a terminally ill dragon at the Singapore Zoo, dismissed the theory that prey die from blood poisoning caused by toxic bacteria in the lizard's mouth.

The long, jagged teeth are the lizard's primary weapons, said Bryan Fry of the University of Melbourne.

"They deliver these deep, deep wounds," he said. "But the venom keeps it bleeding and further lowers the blood pressure, thus bringing the animal closer to unconsciousness."

Four people have been killed in the last 35 years (2009, 2007, 2000 and 1974) and at least eight injured in just over a decade. But park officials say these numbers aren't overly alarming given the steady stream of tourists and the 4,000 people who live in their midst.

"Any time there's an attack, it gets a lot of attention," Rudiharto said. "But that's just because this lizard is exotic, archaic, and can't be found anywhere but here."

Still, the recent attacks couldn't have come at a worse time.

The government is campaigning hard to get the park onto a new list of the Seven Wonders of Nature _ a long shot, but an attempt to at least raise awareness. The park's rugged hills and savannahs are home to orange-footed scrub fowl, wild boar and small wild horses, and the surrounding coral reefs and bays harbor more than a dozen whale species, dolphins and sea turtles.

Claudio Ciofi, who works at the Department of Animal Biology and Genetics at the University of Florence in Italy, said if komodos are hungry, they may be attracted to villages by the smell of drying fish and cooking, and "encounters can become more frequent."

Villagers wish they knew the answer.

They say they've always lived peacefully with Komodos. A popular traditional legend tells of a man who once married a dragon "princess." Their twins, a human boy, Gerong, and a lizard girl, Orah, were separated at birth.

When Gerong grew up, the story goes, he met a fierce-looking beast in the forest. But just as he was about to spear it, his mother appeared, revealing to him that the two were brother and sister.

"How could the dragons get so aggressive?" Hajj Amin, 51, taking long slow drags off his clove cigarettes, as other village elders gathering beneath a wooden house on stilts nodded. Several dragons lingered nearby, drawn by the rancid smell of fish drying on bamboo mats beneath the blazing sun. Also strolling by were dozens of goats and chickens.

"They never used to attack us when we walked alone in the forest, or attack our children," Amin said. "We're all really worried about this."

The dragons eat 80 percent of their weight and then go without food for several weeks. Amin and others say the dragons are hungry partly because of a 1994 policy that prohibits villagers from feeding them.

"We used to give them the bones and skin of deer," said the fisherman.

Villagers recently sought permission to feed wild boar to the Komodos several times a year, but park officials say that won't happen.

"If we let people feed them, they will just get lazy and lose their ability to hunt," said Jeri Imansyah, another reptile expert. "One day, that will kill them. "

The attack that first put villagers on alert occurred two years ago, when 8-year-old Mansyur was mauled to death while defecating in the bushes behind his wooden hut.

People have since asked for a 6-foot-high (2-meter) concrete wall to be built around their villages, but that idea, too, has been rejected. The head of the park, Tamen Sitorus, said: "It's a strange request. You can't build a fence like that inside a national park!"

Residents have made a makeshift barrier out of trees and broken branches, but they complain it's too easy for the animals to break through.

"We're so afraid now," said 11-year-old Riswan, recalling how just a few weeks ago students screamed when they spotted one of the giant lizards in a dusty field behind their school. "We thought it was going to get into our classroom. Eventually we were able to chase it up a hill by throwing rocks and yelling 'Hoohh Hoohh.'"

Then, just two months ago, 31-year-old fisherman Muhamad Anwar was killed when he stepped on a lizard in the grass as he was heading to a field to pick fruit from a sugar tree.

Even park rangers are nervous.

Gone are the days of goofing around with the lizards, poking their tails, hugging their backs and running in front of them, pretending they're being chased, said Muhamad Saleh, who has worked with the animals since 1987.

"Not any more," he says, carrying a 6-foot-long (2-meter) stick wherever he goes for protection. Then, repeating a famous line by Indonesia's most renowned poet, he adds: "I want to live for another thousand of years."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

KOMODO ISLAND, Indonesia — Komodo dragons have shark-like teeth and poisonous venom that can kill a person within hours of a bite. Yet villagers who have lived for generations alongside the worl...
KOMODO ISLAND, Indonesia — Komodo dragons have shark-like teeth and poisonous venom that can kill a person within hours of a bite. Yet villagers who have lived for generations alongside the worl...
Filed by Nick Graham  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 59
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tommygun264
2Q2BSTR8
08:25 PM on 05/25/2009
I live in Hawaii and like many people here I allow geckos to live inside my house as a non-toxic form of pest control. It seriously freaks out my Mom when she comes to visit from the mainland and she hears a gecko chirping somewhere inside the house or sees one hanging out on the ceiling above a lamp or next to a light fixture. I'm going to print out the picture of this dragon, frame it and point to it the next time Mom comes to visit and starts complaining about the "huge" lizard looking at her from the wall over the kitchen window.
04:52 PM on 05/25/2009
How long before border guards request being armed with Komodo Dragons?
03:54 PM on 05/25/2009
More people die in the outback of nasty little spider bites.
03:51 PM on 05/25/2009
They do not have "venom", they have a really nasty bacteria in their mouth, it in turn causes a infection which kills the prey in a day or two.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Mikeeee
Private corps can't do it better!!!
04:18 PM on 05/25/2009
When they catch their prey, they carry out a frenzied biting spree that releases venom, according to a new study this month in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The authors, who used surgically excised glands from a terminally ill dragon at the Singapore Zoo, dismissed the theory that prey die from blood poisoning caused by toxic bacteria in the lizard's mouth.

Read, become educated.
04:43 PM on 05/25/2009
No, that's Paris Hilton.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:33 PM on 05/25/2009
No need to worry, the humans will make sure the animals are extinct soon.
01:41 PM on 05/25/2009
Since the villagers aren't allowed to build a fence or feed the dragons, seems like their next logical step will be to sneak around and kill them, thus defeating completely the purpose of the sanctuary.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OtayPanky
You're welcome
11:21 AM on 05/25/2009
I guess all my exes don't live in Texas after all.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
samilli3
12:30 PM on 05/25/2009
lol
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeffp26
03:41 PM on 05/25/2009
Otay: you really are the man!!!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:39 AM on 05/25/2009
Probably a teabagger who got lost on his way home.
Paulo1
Thanks for reading, (even if you disagree)
08:17 AM on 05/25/2009
My word, simple solution, go back to feeding them.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rf dude
Just an average Man of Bronze - now in Steel!
01:30 AM on 05/25/2009
Did he flush and wash his hands...
--
04:41 AM on 05/25/2009
too funny
10:58 PM on 05/24/2009
4 killed in how many decades. Sheeeesh. Slow news day? You know how many USA kids died last year
in backyard swimming pools?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MNinWI
11:25 AM on 05/25/2009
How many more will be killed by loaded weapons in National Parks??
03:28 PM on 05/25/2009
Not nearly as many that will be killed in their own homes where guns are kept. But good point.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:31 PM on 05/24/2009
Oh, come on! The villagers are not being "terrorized." This is supposed to be Huffington Post, not NY Post. Oh, and the park rangers feed the dragons deer daily for the tourists to watch on Komodo island. Been there, saw that. Walked around the island.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MNinWI
11:26 AM on 05/25/2009
This made it's way to my hometown paper as a top news item on-line. Seems way overblown to me.
08:26 PM on 05/24/2009
In Africa, death by hippo is not uncommon; in Australia, there has been recent spate of deaths by crocs as well as the invasion of 6inch long venomous tarantulas and gigantic frogs into people-infested areas; in the American west, mountain lions attacks are on the rise while coyotes amble unperturbed through suburban tract neighborhoods. Komodos, like sharks, according to the statistics, rarely attack. Fear is what inspires the outcry and often results in culling the animal predator. Failure to take simple and common sense precautions are often more than not the reasons for the "attacks." Wearing a black neoprene suit while surfing or swimming means a shark might be unable to distinguish unedible human from delectable seal. When camping in Yosemite, containerized food helps deter marauding bears. And don't swim in rivers where crocs or hippos are known to live!
photo
RevSpaminator
Life is too short to drink light beer!
02:17 AM on 05/25/2009
Coyotes are not something to be afraid of. They are typically the size of a medium dog. A mountain lion or a bear are scary but most American animals that could kill you will avoid human contact. (Your pets on the other hand..)

I still am more afraid of the deer jumping in front of my car at night.

The biggest threat of all is the wild drunk in a half-ton pickup.
08:00 PM on 05/24/2009
poet update: finally found a reference: http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/chairil.htm

Anwar Chairil (or Chairil Anwar, depending on the source).

Though bullets should pierce my skin
I shall still strike and march forth

Wounds and poison shall I take aflee
Aflee
'Til the pain and pang should dissapear

And I should care even less

I want to live for another thousand years
(from 'Aku', 1943)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
deadcustodian
Saul Alinsky knew the way.
07:48 PM on 05/24/2009
OMG!!!!! DI CK CHENEY IS RIGHT!!!!

Obama is making the whole wide world less safe.
10:39 AM on 05/25/2009
No I don't think so. Cheney and his cr*ny's let an attack happen and they were well aware of it. They could have prevented it. You need to list to Thom Hartmann, Ed Schutlz's and Ron Reagan show and educate yourself and learn the true fact, not lies. Air America

http://airamerica.com/

Ron Reagan is good (6 pm to 9 pm)

Thom Hartmann Show (12:00 to 3 pm)

http://www.thomhartmann.com/

http://www.wegoted.com/ (3 pm to 6 pm)
Ed Schultz is good.
11:37 AM on 05/25/2009
Princess 9/11 happened in C heneys watch