OK, so we've got a very large alligator with the wings of a pterosaur that can repel musket fire. Now it just needs to breathe flames. This is where no parallel exists—there are no known animals that can spit fire or even a flammable liquid. But there are some beetles that can shoot caustic chemicals from their abdomen that can burn people's skin, so it's not totally out of the question that some animal at some point in time could make a flammable liquid. Cobras can spit venom with great accuracy at objects six feet away; the dragon could borrow that ability to propel the flammable liquid. As for lighting it? "Well, maybe, if you had some specialized organ like an electric eel's tail dangling in the mouth, that could spark that liquid and allow the creature to breathe fire," Conrad says. "Of course, this is all very theoretical."