Komodo dragons have iron-coated teeth, scientists find | Reptiles | The Guardian
Komodo dragons have iron-coated teeth, scientists find | Reptiles | The Guardian
Reptile’s teeth found to have covering that helps keep serrated edges razor sharp and resistant to wear
Pretty interesting find. (Not completely sure if this is the right community for this- let me know if you know where else it would be a good fit!)
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the article doesn't mention how corrosion is prevented, since iron loves to rust, also doesn't link to a paper which could contain that information
4 2 ReplyThe coating being orange indicates it is reacting with oxygen, aka rusting.
They aren't shiny silver plated teeth.
10 0 Replyrust of soft tho, it doesn't like to bond with each other
1 0 ReplyHad to look this up yesterday as I had thought the same. In rodents anyway, the orange color is from amino acids, not the iron in their teeth.
2 1 ReplyWhere did you find a source that it was from amino acids?
This one says the orange is from the iron
Wikipedia's citationed summary confirms it is orange due to the the iron
They have four chisel-shaped incisors that continue to grow throughout their lives. The incisors are covered in a thick enamel that is colored orange or reddish-brown by iron compounds.
2 0 Reply
I thought about the rust too. Wouldn't that mean their bite could give you tetanus on top of the hellish bacterial cocktail they have in their saliva?
1 0 Reply