OUTSIDE OF THE BODY
The dragon can be a huge creature depending on the breed. The one shown here is roughly 20 feet long with a wingspan of 35 feet. This type of dragon has extremely small ears, large eyes, spines down its back, and a bone-type spade at the end of its tail. All dragon breeds are different. Some have long ears, and no spade, and some have a fleshy-type triangle-shaped spade. This type of dragon also does not have scales, it has tough leathery skin. Most dragons have scales of some sort.
Take a look at the Western Dragon Body by clicking on the picture below! (size=256K)
SCALES
Scales (and horns/claws) on a dragon are densely packed cells made up of keratin, a tough fibrous protein. When born, a dragon's scales are as soft as tissue paper, and slowly harden while the dragon grows. The iron from the blood, or vegetable matter the dragon eats is absorbed by the dragon's blood stream and mixed with the keratin to create steel-hard scales. The process of getting scales as tough as they can get takes about one year after being hatched.
COLOR
Scale color is determand by the genes of the parent dragons. Usually only red dragons will mate with other red dragons, etc. But if a mating took place between a gold and a green dragon, the result might be a bronze colored offspring. Scales on a dragon are never simply one shade of color. If a dragon is blue, there will be many, many shades of blue. Light, medium, dark, blue-black, etc. Scales are bright and shiny in a healthy dragon, but dull and muted if a dragon is ill.
CAMOUFLAGE
In some breeds of dragons when the dragon is mature, the cells in the scales are able to change color such as a chameleon due to chromatophore, the pigment cells in the scales.This reaction can be caused by emotion (anger, happiness,etc) or by the will of the dragon to change color. If the dragon is angered it can change from its original color to a bright, fierce color such as red, to look more intimidating or during mating rituals, it can flow certain color patterns on its body to attract other dragons. Since dragons are extremely intelligent, it can choose which colors to change into to match the exact background it is near including subtle shadow and highlights. It is so good at this, most things would just walk past a 65 foot dragon hiding in the sand.
THE WING
The wing. The part of the dragon that distinguishes itself from all other creatures.
The dragon wing is a huge, leathery appendage that is found on several different
species of dragon. The wing is usually larger than the dragon's body to accommodate
the incredible force needed to lift and maintain flight.
BONES
The wing is essentially another arm and hand. If you look at the skeleton of
a dragon front arm and claws, you will notice that the wing is just a very stretched
out version. The two thick "arm bones" (humerus and wing radius) runs from the
body of the dragon attaching itself with cartilage and muscle to an "elbow"
of the wing. There are usually 4 or 5 elongated "fingers" on a wing each ending
in a claw. One short "thumb" claw is at the "wrist". The "fingers" then attach
themselves to the "wrist joints" to form the complete wing.
HOW DO THEY FLY?
Thanks to Windseeker
for the flying dragon animation
The actual force of flight is the continuous down sweep of powerful wings scooping,
and thrusting the body upwards. An immature dragon does not have the strength
needed for a vertical jump from flat ground to take off. They will usually stay
near higher cliffs to use the heat updrafts to keep aloft. It takes a few years
of flying to build the extremely strong flight muscles needed to lift the dragon
body from the ground. The wings make actually look small for the mass of the
dragon, but all dragons have an innate magic ability to help them fly. This
magic helps keep dragons from straining themselves during long flights.
WEAPONS
Dragons can also use their wings as an attack weapon if need be, but this is
a last resort. The wing membranes are easily damaged compared to the rest of
a dragon body. If a dragon wing membrane is slashed, it takes a very long time
to heal, and there is a chance the dragon might never fly again if it does not
heal correctly. If attacked on the ground, the dragon will usually run then
jump in the air and fly off avoiding the attacker. But if the dragon is trapped
on the ground it will tuck its wings tightly against its body and use its breath
weapon and claws to protect itself. If the dragon has to use its wings to attack
it will scoop down and slash with its razor sharp wing claws to immobilize the
attacker.
SENSES
Dragons have the same senses as humans; sight, hearing, smelling, touch, and
taste. But some have a six sense which is being able to "read" the emotion of
another being. Their regular five senses are incredibly sensitive. For example,
the sense of smell is about 100 times more sensitive than a bloodhound dog.
They can smell and hear a person or animal from a couple miles away!
Their six sense is very accurate at close range. If a person or animal is feeling
a strong emotion, such as fear or hate, it will register very strongly to the
dragon, even if it is not in visual range of it. This is where dragonfear
comes from. Dragonfear is an all encompassing, frozen-in-place fear that the
dragon causes upon the animal or person seeing a dragon. The dragons sometimes
use this advantage to beat its foes, such as thieves or knights. Only the very
bravest (or very dim-witted) are not affected by this terrible fear. This is
usually an aura around evil-minded dragons, but in a friendly dragon, such as
the Faerie Dragon, this aura is non-existant.
THE FIRE BREATHERS!
Fire: the thing that makes the dragon most feared. It's a hellish belch of flame
that can turn flesh and bone into ash. Though, not all dragons breath fire.
Some have freezing cold breath, others have acid, and some don't use their breath
as a weapon at all! The two that have fire breathing power are the Red Dragon
and Fire Drake.
HOW DO THEY BREATH FIRE?
It all starts when the dragon catch their prey. When dragons eat, they digest
the food in a regular stomach. The digestion then continues in a second stomach
that breaks down the food even further. After the dragon's body has used all
it can from the second digestion, the body then turns the leftover food and
acid into a byproduct of hydrogen. The dragon can hold the hydrogen in various
large glands in it's body for later use, and can call upon it at any time it
needs to. When the dragon needs to belch it's flame, the glands release the
hydrogen into the lungs where it mixes with other various chemicals the body
creates. Once this mixture finds oxygen, it burns extremely hot, and very quick.
The dragon usually has enough hydrogen in its body for about three spits of
flame, but that should be plenty for anything coming up against a large red
dragon. This explanation is about the same for dragons that breath other types
of breath. Their bodies just break down food into different compounds. For another
explination of firebreathing, please read this explination
by Firefenix.
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