Megalania is the largest terrestrial lizard known to have existed. Judging from its size, it would have fed mostly upon medium- to large-sized animals, including any of the giant marsupials such as
Diprotodon, along with other reptiles and small mammals, as well as birds and their eggs and chicks. It had heavily built limbs and body, a large skull complete with a small crest between the eyes, and a jaw full of serrated, blade-like teeth. They note that the
marsupial lion (
Thylacoleo carnifex) has been implicated with the butchery of very large Pleistocene mammals, while megalania has not. In addition, they note that megalania fossils are extremely uncommon, in contrast to ''T. carnifex's
wide distribution across Australian Pleistocene deposits. Quinkana'', a genus of terrestrial crocodiles that grew up to and was present until around 40,000 years ago, has also been marked as another
apex predator of Australian megafauna. Komodo dragons, megalania's closest relative, are known to have evolved in Australia before spreading to their current range in Indonesia, as fossil evidence from
Queensland has implied. If one were to reconstruct the ecosystems that existed before the arrival of the humans on Australia,
reintroducing Komodo dragons as an
ecological proxy of megalania to the continent has been suggested. A study published in 2009 using Wroe's earlier size estimates and an analysis of 18 closely related lizard species estimated a sprinting speed of . This speed is comparable to that of the
extant freshwater crocodile (
Crocodylus johnstoni). The scales of megalania would possibly be similar to those of their extant relatives, possessing a honeycomb microstructure and both durable and resilient to water evaporation.
Venom Along with other
varanid lizards, such as the Komodo dragon and the
Nile monitor, megalania belongs to the proposed clade
Toxicofera, which contains all known reptile
clades possessing toxin-secreting oral glands, as well as their close venomous and nonvenomous relatives, including
Iguania,
Anguimorpha, and
snakes. Closely related varanids use a potent
venom found in glands inside the jaw. The venom in these lizards have been shown to be a
haemotoxin. The venom would act as an
anticoagulant and would greatly increase the bleeding the prey received from its wounds. This would rapidly decrease the prey's blood pressure and lead to
systemic shock. Being a member of Anguimorpha, megalania may have been venomous and if so, would be the largest venomous vertebrate known.
Extinction The youngest remains of the species date to the
Late Pleistocene, with the youngest remains possibly referrable to the species being a large
osteoderm dating to approximately 50,000 years ago from the
Mount Etna Caves National Park in central-eastern
Queensland. A study examined the morphology of nine closely related extant varanid lizards and then
allometrically scaled and compared them to
V. priscus, found that the musculature of the limbs, posture, muscular mass, and possible muscular composition of the animal would most likely have been inefficient when attempting to outrun the early human settlers who colonised Australia during that time. Considering many other species of Australian megafauna went extinct around the same time, either due to human predation or being outcompeted by them, the same can be assumed for megalania. Confrontations between megalania and early
Aboriginal Australians may have inspired tales of fearsome creatures such as the
whowie. ==References==