Lifted from a statement released by the zoo.
Fourteen eggs of lizards of Komodo have been "deposited" at Antwerp Zoo by a female lizard. If the eggs are fertilized and they give birth to baby monitors, it will be an exceptional event for the zoo, the zoo said in a statement Monday.
The eggs are the result of a coupling between lizards of Komodo, Keli and Jaka. They were placed in special incubators but only in 5-7 months that the outbreak will occur. The Komodo dragons are carnivores with a preference for rotting meat. At the zoo, they get whole chickens, mice, fish and beef, 2 to 3 pounds per week. The breeding program is very important because the species is vulnerable, says the statement from the zoo. Only sixty Komodo dragons live in zoos in Europe. In nature, they are found in the islands of Indonesia (Komodo, Rinca, Flores, etc.). Live on these small territories between 3000 and 5000. Their main threat is indirect. Their main prey, deer Javanese, is hunted extensively. Antwerp Zoo, along with other parks in Europe, is supporting a project in situ in the Wae Wuul reserve on the island of Flores. This project ensures that the reserve is regularly patrolled by park wardens and the public is educated and aware of the threat to the lizards.