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Post by oasegenggam on May 4, 2013 21:50:19 GMT -5
i think oasegenggam is joking. Actually I'm not, I saw a Dragon and I would think that it Could snack on Elephants .
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Post by rhino on May 4, 2013 22:10:22 GMT -5
you cannot possibly think a komodo dragon can kill an elephant.
but as for this topic most people agree the dragon would thrive in australia due to the absence of large mammalian carnivores.
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Reticulatus
Ichthyoid
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Post by Reticulatus on May 4, 2013 22:18:16 GMT -5
lol and scrub pythons could always use a new food source.
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Venomous Dragon
Archeon
The Varanid
The Ora, King of The Lizards.
Posts: 2,037
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Post by Venomous Dragon on May 4, 2013 22:23:15 GMT -5
lol and scrub pythons could always use a new food source. But I wonder how they would deal with being a new food source.
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Reticulatus
Ichthyoid
http://fantasyfaceoff.proboards.com
Posts: 709
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Post by Reticulatus on May 4, 2013 22:49:05 GMT -5
I smell a debate cooking...perhaps I was just baiting. Scrubbys only get up to about 50lbs even at 17 feet. The effect such an introduction may have on morelia, aspidites, and liasis is a concern not so much predation on either part but competition. These genus contain some very endangered species.
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Venomous Dragon
Archeon
The Varanid
The Ora, King of The Lizards.
Posts: 2,037
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Post by Venomous Dragon on May 4, 2013 23:01:03 GMT -5
I smell a debate cooking...perhaps I was just baiting. Scrubbys only get up to about 50lbs even at 17 feet. The effect such an introduction may have on morelia, aspidites, and liasis is a concern not so much predation on either part but competition. These genus contain some very endangered species. Honestly they would probably only prey on eachothers young and small individuals. The Komodo might bring new competition but it would also suppress and eat the snake's other competitors, so the Dragon may be a blessing in diguise
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