It’s been a long
wait, but the last of the Komodo Dragon clutch at Memphis Zoo in Tennessee has
finally hatched!
Norberta, the
nine-year-old mother, laid a clutch of eggs last May. The first eggs started to
hatch on January 2nd, and three weeks later the zoo had sixteen
healthy babies.


Photo Credits: Karen Pulfer Focht
This is the third time in little less than a year that
Memphis Zoo has successfully hatched Komodo Dragons. These babies represent a
joint conservation effort between zoos: the mother, Norberta, was loaned to
Memphis Zoo in 2007 for breeding purposes. The babies will all go to different zoos. They may get some display time at Memphis Zoo before they move on to
their new homes.
Although a mother Komodo Dragon incubates her eggs for around nine months in the wild, the babies are on their own once hatched. "They'll bite, first day out of the egg," said Chris Baker, assistant curator of reptiles for the Memphis Zoo. "She'll eat them if she can catch them. When they hatch out of the egg, they have to be ready to go right then."
Learn more after the fold.















