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Such jokers, those Komodo dragons. (Reptiles).


A young Komodo dragon Komodo dragon: see lizard; monitor.
Komodo dragon

Largest living lizard (Varanus komodoensis), a member of the monitor lizard family Varanidae. They live on Komodo Island and a few neighbouring islands in Indonesia.
 will spontaneously mouth and paw at a Frisbee and make other gestures that "would be considered play in a dog or cat," says Gordon Burghardt of the University of Tennessee The University of Tennessee (UT), sometimes called the University of Tennessee at Knoxville (UT Knoxville or UTK), is the flagship institution of the statewide land-grant University of Tennessee public university system in the American state of Tennessee.  in Knoxville.

Behaviorists wrestling with the problem of describing and explaining play haven't paid much attention to reptiles reptiles

terrestrial or aquatic vertebrates which breathe air through lungs and have a skin covering of horny scales. They are poikilothermic, oviparous or ovoviviparous, and, if they have legs they are short and constructed solely for crawling.
, Burghardt says. Yet for decades, observers have recorded anecdotes of young Komodo dragons doing things that lack obvious utility and suggest whimsical antics. When a Komodo dragon egg hatched at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., Burghardt jumped at the chance to make systematic observations as the youngster grew up.

Burghardt and his colleagues worked with zoo staff for 2 years to videotape 31 sessions with the young female Komodo dragon, named Kraken Kraken

giant snakelike sea creature. [Dan. Folklore: Merca tante, 194–195]

See : Monsters
, as keepers put new objects into her endosure. Besides a Frisbee, the novelties they offered her included plastic rings, a shoe, a bucket, and a tin can.

Kraken typically nudged them with her snout snout

the upper lip and the apex of the nose, especially of the pig. Called also rostrum. Has a specialized skin to survive the rigors of rooting, is supported by a separate bone (the os rostri), and also has a few sensory hairs.
, swiped at them with her paw, and carried them around in her mouth. She treated them differently from her food, and Burghardt says the tapes "disprove disprove,
v to refute or to prove false by affirmative evidence to the contrary.
 the view that object play is just food-motivated predatory behavior."

The tapes also show Kraken seemingly eager for social play. In one session, she eased up behind caretaker Trooper Walsh, who managed to stand almost still. Kraken then reached up to his rear pocket, pulled out his handkerchief, and stood near him with it in her mouth. He reached to grab it, and the two of them both pulled at it in what Burghardt says looks, even to the trained eye, like someone playing tug-of-war with a puppy.--S.M.
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:explaining play
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Aug 3, 2002
Words:276
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