KOMODO ISLAND
Komodo is one of the 17,508 islands
that make up the Republic of Indonesia.
The island is particularly notable as the natural habitat of the komodo dragon, the largest lizard on earth
and consequently named after the island. Komodo Island has a surface area of
390 km² and a permanent population of over 2,000. The inhabitants of the
island are descendants of former convicts who were
exiled to the island and who have mixed with Bugis
from Sulawesi. The population are primarily
adherents of Islam but
there are also Christian
and Hindu
congregations.
Komodo is part of
the Lesser Sunda chain
of islands and forms part of the Komodo National
Park. In addition, the island is a popular destination for diving. Administratively, it is part of the
East Nusa Tenggara
province.
History
The earliest
stories of a dragon existing in the region circulated widely and attracted
considerable attention. But no one visited the island to check the story until
official interest was sparked in the early 1910s by stories from Dutch sailors
based in Flores about a mysterious creature. The
creature was allegedly a "dragon" which inhabited a small island in
the Lesser Sunda Islands (the main island of which is Flores in East Nusa Tenggara).
The Dutch sailors
reported that the creature measured up to seven meters in length with a large
body and mouth which constantly spat fire. Hearing the reports, Lieutenant
Steyn van Hensbroek, an official of the Dutch Colonial Administration in
Flores, planned a trip to Komodo Island. He armed himself, and accompanied by a
team of soldiers he landed on the island. After a few days, Hensbroek managed
to kill one of the strange animals.
Van Hensbroek took
the animal to headquarters where measurements were taken. It was approximately
2.1 meters long, with a shape very similar to that of a lizard. More samples
were then photographed by Peter A. Ouwens, the Director of the Zoological
Museum and Botanical
Gardens in Bogor, Java. The records that Ouwens made
are the first reliable documentation of details about what is now called the Komodo dragon or Komodo monitor.
Ouwens was keen to
obtain additional samples. He recruited hunters who killed two dragons
measuring 3.1 meters and 3.35 meters as well as capturing two pups, each
measuring less than one meter. Ouwens carried out studies on the samples and
concluded that the komodo dragon was not a flamethrower but was a type of monitor lizard. Research results were
published in 1912. Ouwens named the giant lizard Varanus komodoensis,
more commonly known as a komodo dragon.
Realizing the significance of the dragons on Komodo Island as an endangered
species, the Dutch government issued a regulation on the protection of komodos
on Komodo Island in 1915.
The komodo dragon
became something of a living legend. In the decades since the komodo was
discovered, various scientific expeditions from a range of countries have
carried out field research on the dragons on Komodo Island.
Komodo has been
included into the controversial New7Wonders of
Nature list since November 11, 2011.
Location
Komodo lies
between the substantially larger neighboring islands Sumbawa to the west and Flores to the east.
Fauna
Komodo Dragon
The island is
famous not only for its heritage of convicts but also for the unique fauna
which roam it. The komodo dragon,
the world's largest living lizard, takes its name from the island. A type of monitor lizard, it inhabits Komodo Island
and some of the smaller surrounding islands, as well as part of western Flores.
Javan deer also inhabit the island, though
they are not native. Other animals include buffalo, civets, cockatoo and
macaques.
Pink Beach
Komodo contains a
beach with pink sand,
one of only seven in the world. The sand appears pink because it
is a mixture of white sand and red sand, formed from pieces of Foraminifera.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komodo_%28island%29