FIRE BREATHING
Well, fire-breathing without burning yourself is obviously possible. In addition to various systems already proposed with binary compounds, I'd like to point out that you could have self-igniting saliva that includes a stabilizing compounds. This IIRC is the method many poisonous snakes use with their poison. They simply secrete the anti-dote together with the poison and it will protect them from incidental exposure, but when the venom is "used properly" the protection will fall short and the target will be poisoned.
As the saliva glands -> venom glands path is the logical pathway for the evolution of fire-breathing reptile this would be the proper starting point IMHO. Poison could be initially an irritant, evolve to being corrosive (ants have acid for example), and if the corrosive is oxidative that is short path to making things burn. It would likely be a mixture of several oxidizers and matching stabilizers. Oxidizers would probably mostly be based on oxygen from the air. Chlorine might be easy enough to get near the ocean. Fluorine would be kind of neat to add, but I am not sure if there is a convenient source.
As a practical matter the stabilizers would probably be something that is rapidly vaporized. Inside the dragon it would be continuously replenished, but as soon as the "fire-breathing" started the chemical balance would break almost instantly.
Some fuel beyond the methane from breathing would probably be also mixed in. Some mixture of alcohols and fat, I'd guess. To give pleasant clinging effect when breathing on someone. And give a higher temperature to get fires started. And cause serious burns even if the target doesn't ignite. Although a strong oxidizer would make most organic things burn well enough.
The probable evolution path would be from a spitting venom, initially targeted at eyes. Then mating rituals. So it would be flashy and mostly cause damage to exposed parts. On targets of reasonable size. If the dragon is much larger than the target, as implied by the question, it would be a lethal weapon.
In the real world the above would kind of imply evolution from snakes as most likely option. I'd actually go with that as snakes re-evolving legs would neatly sidestep issues with six being a wrong number of limbs and allow 2 wings plus 4 legs or 6 legs configurations.
FLYING
The big issue with dragons, especially when combined with flying, is obviously the size. Realistically the issue has been solved by engineers with either high-energy power generation (airplanes and helicopters) or by making the aircraft float in the air with lifting gas. Since the physical problem to solve is the same these would be the solutions available to draconic (non-magical) evolution as well.
I find the concept of fire-breathing animals, probably commonly fighting each other, being filled with hydrogen less than convincing. Helium would work, but the only sources for it would be ingesting large amounts of methane (methanovore?) or radioactive generation. Tapping underground methane would actually be kind of interesting, as it would explain why dragons spend centuries in underground caverns doing nothing visible to humans. They are breathing in the methane, living from the energy of it and harvesting mixed in helium. Actually eating methane might be a draconic attribute even if you skip dragon-blimps. Apart from matching the iconic behaviour of dracons, a source of methane is useful to fire-breathing.
Third lifting gas option would be hot gas, either plain air or steam. This might actually work for a VERY large animal. And needing to generate high temperatures would match with evolving other pyrotechnics.
Problem is that dragon-blimps don't really look very dragonic. So I think I'd skip this option and focus on increasing power density.
I think the easiest way to up power density would be to increase the number of hearts. Basically biological power density is limited by the ability to remove heat and metabolites from tissue. You also need to bring energy in, but that is not generally the issue when talking about power density. This kind of implies that dragons would be able to boost their metabolic rate to level insane. Which would imply very high blood pressure at muscular system, while other parts, such as brain, maintain normal pressures. And one heart maintaining high pressure at a very large animal wouldn't really work that well anyway. Separate secondary circulation systems that boost pressure selectively might work.
By itself this wouldn't be enough, but if you can increase blood pressure, and maybe even have an entirely separate circulation of "something else" with higher power density, you can also replace muscle cells with something else. You can't really make cells work with power beyond certain level, but cells could generate structures capable of higher power in a manner similar to how hair is created. I have no idea how high this could get the power density, but high enough that power density wouldn't be the biggest issue...
So you end up with the structural strength being the big issue. Hollow or otherwise low density bones are pretty much compulsory. Even then you'd probably need "biologically generated but not living" structures such as I used to dodge the power density issue. Nature has some remarkably strong protein based fibers and glues, so composite structure of fibers combined with strong adhesive seems likely. Something similar to what trees use with cellulose and lignin? Trees can grow to large sizes and protein based solution would plausibly be stronger. Supplemented with similarly reinforced "semi-exoskeleton" of powerful natural armor (very dragonic) and the high density muscles discussed before, this might be enough. Certainly you could get something larger than any living dinosaurs.
Breathing enough oxygen would still be an issue. Dinosaurs and birds have more efficient lungs than mammals do but still. If we assume that the fire comes from a powerful oxidant, the dragon might be capable of storing large amounts of the oxidant and use that oxygen to power up. Or possibly the "new muscles" required anyway, don't consume oxygen directly but work more like a plug-in hybrid does. Dragon sleeps and charges the batteries for the muscles and then the muscles can do a specific amount work without extra metabolism needed beyond the secondary circulation for cooling and energy.
I can see how the exotic bones and hide would evolve naturally as sizes go up. Reinforced structure is useful in intermediate forms and based on natural proteins. Same with extra hearts. Extra control of blood pressure in extremities is useful in intermediate forms for large animals. Evolution for exotic muscles is harder... Then again if we assume a snake re-evolved limbs and already assume an unusual configuration, the exotic muscles might not be evolved from normal muscle to begin with. Which doesn't really suggest how they evolved, but opens up the possibilities enough for the lack of explanation to be less bothersome.
Sorry, for rambling, but this is actually something I have though occasionally about...
3How about legs? One of the things that bothers me slightly - almost all animal life is quadruped, and more legs is the realm of insects and spiders. Even insects - mostly 6 legged with wings, not many (any?) examples of 4 legged fliers. So 4 legs and 2 wings doesn't fit. Would your dragon by wyvern (bird) style? – Sobrique – 2014-11-25T17:41:20.210
excellent point. that needs clarification ! – Sheraff – 2014-11-25T17:45:34.353
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwiduM7xlZTLAhXFVhQKHdBDAvkQtwIIIzAC&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D8FIDeOOL52Q&usg=AFQjCNEOFe12KqdrTWUtv9BdNO49ujk2rA&sig2=UxkTfzf3kT3PumtTEew6Ag&bvm=bv.115339255,d.d24 The Last dragon, covers all of this – Flotolk – 2016-02-26T00:28:21.183
3Consider Anne McCaffrey's Pern books for a good in-depth exploration of this and Terry Pratchett's Strata for a brief passing version - in which dragons also travel exceedingly fast by tucking their heads under their bodies and using their breath as an afterburner. – glenatron – 2014-12-04T10:34:54.300
Dragons are more like aliens to our world, something more realistic and earth like would be a Wyvern – Charon – 2016-08-11T12:49:23.223
I also wish there could be dragons but I think there s a reason why they are just legends. It just doesn't make sense from a natural selection point of view to develop such features. If you are big enough, you are already at the top of the food chain. Why would you need to fly? – Fred – 2016-11-27T23:40:43.260
1@Fred, not everything "makes sense" evolutionarily speaking. Many "features" are random mutations or leftovers from a previous state when it did make sense. Plus, some dinosaurs did fly while being at the top of the food chain. – Sheraff – 2016-11-27T23:45:27.403
I have seen a film that was filmed as a documentary and aboard exactly this problem, they investigate how can a dragon be real and also they found a dragon fossil. It was very nice and have an interesting point of view about they fly and the fire breath, more or less they have methane gas sack from the digestion that make they more light and that use for fire breath. – PhoneixS – 2015-01-15T08:33:27.433
1
This is probablythe limit on your size, https://pterosaurheresies.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/quetzalcoatlus-giraffe.jpg note these animals are incredibly lightly built, so you have to make them smaller if you make them heavier.
– John – 2017-03-19T17:15:22.343@John, so we could assume this to be the maximum size for a juvenile dragon (I think someone mentioned in the replies that it would make sense for only the juveniles to be able to fly and then the adults would become more sedentary) – Sheraff – 2017-03-20T02:07:17.953
assuming the juveniles lack most of their armor yes, if you shrink them a bit a more muscular head and a scaly body are easier and you still end up with something much bigger than a human. some reptiles and archosaurs continue growing throughout their lives you could do the same with the dragons, the older they are the bigger they are. – John – 2017-03-20T03:29:03.900
1for armor you may want to go with crocodilian like scutes (osteoderms) which are probably the strongest armor you get in vertebrates, bone cores with thick keratin covers. downside their fairly heavy, upside they can stop small caliber bullets. you can look at Nodosauridae to cover a wide range of coverage vs flexibility. – John – 2017-03-20T03:36:24.657
These are very good points. I wish @Monty Wild would add them to his answer so that we'd really get a complete picture of the animal. – Sheraff – 2017-03-20T07:42:16.313
1@Sheraff, I'll get around to it in the next day or so. There's a fair bit of typing to be done, and I'm not about to do it on my phone... – Monty Wild – 2017-03-21T15:22:22.810
2
This made me think of The Flight of Dragons by Peter Dickinson. Might be of great use to you. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flight_of_Dragons_(book) They also made it into an animated film.
Check it out.
What if the flame iconic for dragons was a way to heat the lizard's cold-blooded system so it can survive in more frigid climates? – WorldCraftTrainee – 2017-11-27T04:54:53.573
@WorldCraftTrainee So you're saying they'd be from colder regions? – Sheraff – 2017-11-27T12:03:47.213
I would add a few more details about the exact kind of dragon you want. It's kinda of impossible to answer "correctly" – DonyorM – 2014-09-19T07:18:28.597
Question edited. Is that better? – Sheraff – 2014-09-19T07:25:05.560
Much better, removed down vote and added upvote! I like the actual question a lot. – DonyorM – 2014-09-19T07:27:08.647
Out of interest are your dragons cold blooded or warm? – Liath – 2014-09-19T09:00:57.993
1
I don't know. What makes the most sense? I believe dinosaurs were neither (http://www.sciencemag.org/content/344/6189/1216.short), nowadays "reptiles" are cold blooded, and these dragons we're describing breathe out and resist fire...
– Sheraff – 2014-09-19T09:05:16.690@FlorianPellet I'm not sure - that's why I asked! – Liath – 2014-09-19T09:09:06.257
1
Quite a few questions regarding Dragons have speculation here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9myFB23W0U
– Jani Hyytiäinen – 2015-06-26T13:11:08.1772To address the dinosaur comments, the Earth was a very different climate at the time, so comparisons would be hard. There are hypotheses about the factors which allowed dinosaurs to be so large, and the same factors could have led to the Pleistocene megafauna (such as increased atmospheric oxygen). The good news is that humans did live during the Pleistocene. It might be possible to suggest humans could coexist with dinosaur-like dragons in the same climate. – Bryan – 2014-09-21T06:56:43.380
1
Didn't the Animal Planet have a show that explained both flight and fire with helium?
– DeveloperWeeks – 2015-08-28T16:07:46.263It is possible that they have sacks of fat that they can rupture and ignite using... static electricity maybe? There are still many problems with the propulsion of the fire, as well as not killing the "dragon" in the first place. – Quiquȅ – 2015-11-22T01:39:26.627