Difference between revisions of "Iguana" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Taxobox  
 
{{Taxobox  
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| image = Iguana iguana.jpg
 
| image = Iguana iguana.jpg
 
| image_width = 250px
 
| image_width = 250px
| image_caption = A [[green iguana]] (''Iguana iguana'')
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| image_caption = A [[green iguana]] ''(Iguana iguana)''
 
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
 
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
 
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
 
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
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*[[Green Iguana]], ''I. iguana''
 
*[[Green Iguana]], ''I. iguana''
 
}}
 
}}
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'''Iguana''' is both the common name for several of the larger members of tropical [[lizard]]s in the family '''Iguanidae,''' and the scientific name of the [[genus]] within Iguanidae comprised of two extant members, the green iguana ''(I. iguana)'' and the lesser Antillean iguana ''(I. delicatissima)''. In the broader sense, iguanas are scattered over several genera and include the desert iguana ''(Dipsosaurus dorsalis)'', the marine iguana ''(Amblyrhynchus cristatus)'', Galápagos land iguanas (genus ''Conolophus''), and spiny-tailed iguanas (genus ''Ctenosaura''). The iguana family, Iguanidae, also includes smaller species whose members are not called iguanas.
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{{toc}}
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Iguanas provide values for the [[ecosystem]] and for humans. [[Ecology|Ecologically]], they are important to [[food chain]]s, consuming largely plant matter and being eaten by various predators. For humans, they add to the wonder of nature and the green iguana has been a popular food source in Central and South America for the past 7000 years, as well as a popular pet. 
  
'''Iguana''' is the both the common name for several of the larger members of tropical [[lizard]]s in the [[New World]] family '''Iguanidae''' and the scientific name of the [[genus]] comprised of two extant members, the green iguana (''I. iguana'') and the lesser Antillean iguana (''I. delicatissima''). In the earlier case, iguanas are scattered over several genera and include the desert iguana (''Dipsosaurus dorsalis''), the chuckwalla (''Sauromalus obesus''), the marine iguana (''Amblyrhynchus cristatus''), Galápagos land iguanas (genus ''Conolophus''), and spiny-tailed iguanas (genus ''Ctenosaura''). The iguana family, Iguanidae'' also includes smaller species whose members are not called iguanas.
+
The word "Iguana" is derived from a Spanish form of the original [[Taino]] name for the species, "Iwana" (Coles 2002).
 
 
The word "Iguana" is derived from a Spanish form of the original [[Taino]] name for the species "Iwana".<ref name="Coles">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Coles
 
  | first = William
 
  | title =  Green Iguana
 
  | work = U.S.V.I. Animal Fact Sheet #08
 
  | publisher = Department of Planning and Natural Resources US Virgin Islands Division of Fish and Wildlife
 
  | url = http://www.vifishandwildlife.com/Education/FactSheet/PDF_Docs/08GreenIguana.pdf
 
  | date = 2002
 
  }}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
  
 
==Iguanidae==
 
==Iguanidae==
 +
Iguanidae is a family of [[lizard]]s composed of iguanas and related species, including the [[green iguana]] commonly kept as a pet. The term "lizard" refers to any of the numerous [[reptile]]s of the suborder Sauria (or Lacertilia) of the order Squamata. As lizards, iguanas are characterized by having less flexible jaws than snakes, movable eyelids, external ear openings, and have four-well developed limbs, as well as an [[integumentary system]] comprised of [[scale]]s, with a skull composed of [[quadrate bone]]s.
  
 +
[[File:Galápagos marine iguana.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Marine iguanas, ''Amblyrhynchus cristatus''], in the [[Galapagos Islands]]]]
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In addition to iguanas, which in a general sense refer to the larger members of Iguanidae, the family includes the chuckwalla ''(Sauromalus obesus)'', the side-blotched lizards (genus ''Uta''), and the anole (subfamily Polychrotinae, although sometimes placed in its own family Plychrotidae), among others.
  
'''Iguanidae''' is a family of [[lizard]]s composed of iguanas and related species, including the [[green iguana]] commonly kept as a pet.
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Two different classification schemes have been used to define the structure of this family.  These are the "traditional" classifications and the classifications presented by Frost et al. (1989).
 
 
==Classification of iguanidae==
 
 
 
Two different classification schemes have been used to define the structure of this family.  These are the "traditional" classification and the classification presented by Frost et al. (1989).
 
  
Frost et al. redefined this family. The genera belonging to the different [[Subfamily (biology)|subfamilies]] were assigned to separate [[Rank (zoology)|families]]. This view is not generally accepted and the 'traditional' classification is still widely used.
+
The traditional classification is as follows:<br/>
===Traditional classification===
 
 
'''Family Iguanidae'''
 
'''Family Iguanidae'''
*Subfamily [[Corytophanidae|Corytophaninae]]: casquehead lizards
+
*Subfamily [[Corytophanidae|Corytophaninae]]: Casquehead lizards
*Subfamily [[Crotaphytidae|Crotaphytinae]]: collared and leopard lizards
+
*Subfamily [[Crotaphytidae|Crotaphytinae]]: Collared and leopard lizards
*Subfamily [[Hoplocercidae|Hoplocercinae]]: wood lizards, clubtails
+
*Subfamily [[Hoplocercidae|Hoplocercinae]]: Wood lizards, clubtails
*Subfamily [[Iguaninae]]: [[green iguana]]s and [[spinytail iguana]]s
+
*Subfamily [[Iguaninae]]: [[Green iguana]]s and [[spinytail iguana]]s
 
*Subfamily [[Leiocephalidae|Leiocephalinae]]
 
*Subfamily [[Leiocephalidae|Leiocephalinae]]
 
*Subfamily [[Leiosauridae|Leiosaurinae]]
 
*Subfamily [[Leiosauridae|Leiosaurinae]]
 
*Subfamily [[Liolaemidae|Liolaeminae]]
 
*Subfamily [[Liolaemidae|Liolaeminae]]
 
*Subfamily [[Opluridae|Oplurinae]]:  Madagascar iguanids
 
*Subfamily [[Opluridae|Oplurinae]]:  Madagascar iguanids
* Subfamily [[Phrynosomatidae|Phrynosomatinae]]: ear-less, spiny, tree, side-blotched and horned lizards
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*Subfamily [[Phrynosomatidae|Phrynosomatinae]]: Ear-less, spiny, tree, side-blotched and horned lizards
*Subfamily [[Polychrotidae|Polychrotinae]]: anoles
+
*Subfamily [[Polychrotidae|Polychrotinae]]: Anoles
*Subfamily [[Tropiduridae|Tropidurinae]]: neotropical ground lizards
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*Subfamily [[Tropiduridae|Tropidurinae]]: Neotropical ground lizards
 +
 
 +
[[File:Land Iguana, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Galapagos land iguana, ''Conolophus subscritatus'']].
 +
Frost et al. (1989) redefined this family. The genera belonging to the various [[Subfamily (biology)|subfamilies]] were assigned to separate [[Rank (zoology)|families]]. This view is not generally accepted and the "traditional" classification is still widely used. The Frost et al. (1989) system is as follows: <br/>
  
===Frost et al classification of iguanas===
 
 
'''Family Iguanidae'''
 
'''Family Iguanidae'''
 
*Genus ''[[Amblyrhynchus]]''
 
*Genus ''[[Amblyrhynchus]]''
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*Genus ''[[Cyclura]]''
 
*Genus ''[[Cyclura]]''
 
*Genus ''[[Dipsosaurus]]''
 
*Genus ''[[Dipsosaurus]]''
*Genus ''[[Iguana]]''
+
*Genus ''Iguana''
 
*Genus ''[[Sauromalus]]''
 
*Genus ''[[Sauromalus]]''
 
*Genus ''[[Armandisaurus]]'' (extinct)
 
*Genus ''[[Armandisaurus]]'' (extinct)
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*Genus ''[[Pumila]]'' (extinct)
 
*Genus ''[[Pumila]]'' (extinct)
  
<center><gallery>
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The ''Iguana'' [[genus]] includes lizards native to tropical areas of [[Central America|Central]] and [[South America]] and the [[Caribbean]], first described by Austrian [[naturalist]] [[Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti]] in his book, ''Specimen Medicum, Exhibens Synopsin Reptilium Emendatam cum Experimentis circa Venena,'' in 1768.  The genus ''Iguana'' includes two [[species]]: The [[green iguana]] and the [[Lesser Antillean iguana]].
Image:AA_Iguana_Fot_Ars_Summum.JPG|Iguana sp.
 
Image:Iguana delicatissima.jpg|Lesser Antillean Iguana, [[Dominica|Dominica, W.I.]].
 
Image:6010_aquaimages.jpg|Marine Iguanas, [[Galapagos Islands]].
 
Image:6039_aquaimages.jpg|Land Iguana, [[Galapagos Islands]].
 
Image:Divingiguana.jpg|Iguana found in the [[Florida Keys]], diving into the sea.
 
Image:Iguana iguana 2 AB.jpg|A [[green iguana]].
 
</gallery></center>
 
 
 
a [[genus]] of [[lizard]] native to tropical areas of [[Central America|Central]] and [[South America]] and the [[Caribbean]] first described by Austrian [[naturalist]] [[Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti]] in his book ''Specimen Medicum, Exhibens Synopsin Reptilium Emendatam cum Experimentis circa Venena'' in 1768.  The genus ''iguana'' includes two [[species]]: the [[Green Iguana]] and the [[Lesser Antillean Iguana]].
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
==Green iguana==
 
==Green iguana==
{{Taxobox
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[[image:Iguana_Iguana.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Green iguana, ''Iguana iguana'']]  
| color = pink
 
| name = Green Iguana
 
| status = {{StatusLeastConcern}}
 
| image = Iguana_Iguana.jpg  
 
| image_width = 250px
 
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
 
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
 
| classis = [[reptile|Sauropsida]]
 
| ordo = [[Squamata]]
 
| familia = [[Iguanidae]]
 
| genus = ''[[Iguana]]''
 
| species = '''''I. iguana'''''
 
| binomial = ''Iguana iguana''
 
| binomial_authority = ([[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], [[1758]])
 
}}
 
 
 
The '''Green Iguana''' (''Iguana iguana'') is a large, [[arboreal]] [[herbivorous]] [[species]] of [[lizard]] of the [[genus]] [[iguana]] native to [[Central America|Central]] and [[South America]].  The Green iguana ranges over a large geographic area, from  southern [[Brazil]] and [[Paraguay]] to as far north as [[Mexico]], the [[Caribbean]] Islands; and in the [[United States]] as [[feral]] populations in [[Florida]], [[Hawaii]] and the [[Rio Grande Valley]] of [[Texas]].  The Green iguana is a [[reptile]] commonly found in captivity as a [[pet]] and grows to 1.5 meters in length from head to tail, although a few specimens have grown more than 2 meters (6 feet) and can weigh upwards of 20 pounds (10 kg).
 
 
 
===Taxonomy===
 
 
 
The word Iguana is derived from a Spanish form of the [[Taino]] name for the species "Iwana".<ref name="Coles">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Coles
 
  | first = William
 
  | title =  Green Iguana
 
  | work = U.S.V.I. Animal Fact Sheet #08
 
  | publisher = Department of Planning and Natural Resources US Virgin Islands Division of Fish and Wildlife
 
  | url = http://www.vifishandwildlife.com/Education/FactSheet/PDF_Docs/08GreenIguana.pdf
 
  | date=  2002
 
  }}
 
</ref><ref name="devosjoli"/>  The species was first officially described by Swedish [[botanist]] [[Carolus Linnaeus]] in 1758.<ref name="Hollingsworth"/>  In the two centuries since then, no less than 17 species and [[subspecies]] have been identified with all but one species(''[[Iguana delicatissima]]'') being found to be invalid.<ref name="Hollingsworth">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Hollingsworth
 
  | first = Bradford D.
 
  | title = The Evolution of Iguanas an Overview and a Checklist of Species
 
  | work = Iguanas: Biology and Conservation
 
  | publisher = University of California Press
 
  | pages = 40-41
 
  | date=  2004
 
  | isbn = 9780520238541
 
  }}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
In Spanish speaking countries, males of the species are referred to as ''gorrobo'' or ''ministro'' and juveniles are called ''iguanita'' or ''gorrobito''.<ref name="Swanson">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last = Swanson
 
  | first = Paul L
 
  | title =The Iguana: Iguana iguana iguana
 
  | journal = Herpetolgica
 
  | volume=6
 
  | pages=187-193
 
  | year = 1950
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
===Distribution and habitat===
 
 
 
The native range of the Green iguana extends from southern Mexico to central Brazil, Paraguay, and [[Bolivia]] and the [[Caribbean]]; specifically [[Grenada]], [[Curacao]], [[Trinidad and Tobago]], [[St. Lucia]], [[St. Vincent]], and [[Utila]].<ref name="Lazell"/><ref name="Krysko"/>  They have been introduced to [[Grand Cayman]], [[Puerto Rico]], [[Texas]], Florida, Hawaii, and the US Virgin Islands.<ref name="Krysko"/><ref name="wildblue"> {{Citation
 
  | last = Mani
 
  | first = Bina
 
  | title = Wild Blue Iguanas plummeting towards extinction
 
  | date=  7/17/2002
 
  | year =2002
 
  | url =http://www.blueiguana.ky/zzzwildblue.htm
 
  | accessdate = 10/28/2007 }}</ref><ref name="seidel">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Seidel
 
  | first = M
 
  | last2 = Franz
 
  | first2 = R
 
  | title = Amphibians and reptiles (exclusive of marine turtles) of the Cayman Islands
 
  | work = The Cayman Islands: natural history and biogeography
 
  | publisher = Kluwer Academic Publishers
 
  | location = The Netherlands
 
  | pages = 407-434
 
  | date=  1994
 
  | isbn = 9780792324621
 
  }}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
[[Image:Iguana iguana 2 adults 1 young.jpg|thumb|left|250px|a young iguana with two adults in the trees]]
 
Green iguanas are [[diurnal animal|diurnal]] and [[arboreal]] and often found near water.<ref name="Cogger">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Cogger
 
  | first = Harold
 
  | last2 = Zweifel
 
  | first2 = Richard
 
  | title = Reptiles & Amphibians
 
  | publisher = Weldon Owen
 
  | location = [[Sydney, Australia]]
 
  | pages = 140
 
  | date=  1992
 
  | isbn = 0831727861
 
  }}
 
</ref><ref name="Samuelson"/>  Agile climbers, iguanas can fall up to 50 feet and land unhurt (iguanas use their hind leg claws to "hook" leaves, branches, or anything in a "clasping" motion to break a fall).<ref name="Samuelson"/><ref name="Audobon">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Bebler
 
  | first = John L.
 
  | last2 = King
 
  | first2 = F. Wayne
 
  | title = The Audubon Society Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of North America
 
  | publisher = Alfred A. Knopf
 
  |Location= New York
 
  | pages = 511-512
 
  | date=  1979
 
  | isbn = 0394508246
 
  }}
 
</ref><ref name="Rosenfeld">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Rosenfeld
 
  | first = Arthur
 
  | title = Exotic Pets
 
  | publisher = [[Simon & Schuster]]
 
  | location= New York
 
  | pages = 105
 
  | date=  1989
 
  | isbn = 067147654
 
  }}
 
</ref>  During cold, wet weather, Green iguanas prefer to stay on the ground for greater warmth.<ref name="Swanson"/>  When swimming an iguana remains submerged and lets its four legs hang limply against its side and propels itself through the water with powerful tail strokes.<ref name="Swanson"/>
 
 
 
 
 
Because of the Green iguana's popularity in the pet trade and as a food source in [[Latin America]], they are listed on the [[CITES]] Appendix II, which means that while they are not an [[endangered species]], "their trade must be controlled so as to not harm the species in the future".<ref name="cites">{{Citation
 
  | Work =Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
 
  | title = Appendices I,II, and III
 
  | date=  9/13/2007
 
  | year =2007
 
  | url = http://www.cites.org/eng/app/appendices.shtml
 
  | accessdate = 10/28/2007 }}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
===Anatomy and morphology===
 
In southern countries of their range, such as [[Peru]], Green iguanas appear bluish in color with bold black markings.<ref name="Samuelson"/> On islands such as [[Bonaire]], [[Curacao]], [[Aruba]], and [[Grenada]], a Green iguana's color may range from green to lavender, black, and even pink.<ref name="devosjoli"/><ref name ="Samuelson"/> Green iguanas from the western region of Costa Rica are red and animals of the northen ranges, such as Mexico, appear orange.<ref name="Samuelson"/><ref name="devosjoli"/> Juvenile Green iguanas from [[El Salvador]] are often bright blue as babies, however they lose this color as they get older.<ref name="devosjoli"/>
 
 
 
[[Image:AA Iguana Fot Ars Summum.JPG|thumb|right|250px|A male Green iguana with spines and [[dewlap]].]]
 
Green iguanas possess a row of spines along their backs and along their tails which helps to protect them from predators.<ref name="Samuelson"/> Their whiplike tails can be used to deliver painful strikes and like many other lizards, when grabbed by the tail, the iguana can allow it to break, so it can escape and eventually regrow a new one.<ref name="SS"/><ref name="Rosenfeld"/> In addition, iguanas have well developed [[dewlap]]s which helps regulate their body temperature.<ref name="Audobon"/>  It is also used in courtships and displays.<ref name="devosjoli"/><ref name="Samuelson"/><ref name="Conant">
 
{{cite book
 
  | last =Conant
 
  | first =Roger
 
  | last2 =Collins
 
  | first2 =Joseph
 
  | title =A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians Eastern/Central North America
 
  | publisher =Houghton Mifflin Company
 
  | date= 1991
 
  | pages =94-95
 
  | location =[[Boston]], [[Massachussets]]
 
  | isbn = 0395583896 }}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
Green iguanas have excellent vision, enabling them to detect shapes and motions at long distances.<ref name="Brames">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last = Brames
 
  | first = Henry
 
  | title = Aspects of Light and Reptile Immunity
 
  | journal = Iguana: Conservation, Natural History, and Husbandry of Reptiles
 
  | publisher = International Reptile Conservation Foundation
 
  | volume = 14
 
  | issue = 1
 
  | year = 2007
 
  |pages=19-23
 
}}
 
</ref> As Green iguanas have only a few [[Rod cell]]s, they have poor vision in low-light conditions. At the same time, they have cells called “double [[Cone cell]]s” that give them sharp color vision and enable them to see [[ultraviolet]] wavelengths.<ref name="Brames"/> This ability is highly useful when basking so the animal can ensure that it absorbs enough sunlight in the forms of [[UVA]] and [[UVB]] to produce [[Vitamin D]].<ref name="devosjoli"/><ref name="Rosenfeld"/>
 
 
 
Green iguanas have evolved a white photosensory organ on the top of their heads called the [[parietal eye]], which are also called third eye, pineal eye or pineal gland.<ref name="Brames"/> This “eye” doesn’t work the same way as a normal eye does as it has only a rudimentary retina and lens and thus cannot form images.<ref name="Brames"/> It is, however, sensitive to changes in light and dark and can detect movement.<ref name="Brames"/> This helps the iguana when being stalked by predators from above.<ref name="Brames"/>
 
 
 
Green iguanas have very sharp teeth that are capable of shredding leaves and even human skin.<ref name="devosjoli"/> The teeth are situated on the inner sides of the jawbones which is why they are hard to see in smaller specimens.<ref name="Conant"/>
 
 
 
Primarily [[herbivorous]], Green iguanas are presented with a special problem for [[osmoregulation]]; plant matter contains more [[potassium]] and as it has less nutritional content per gram, more must be eaten to meet metabolic needs.<ref name="Hazard">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Hazard
 
  | first = Lisa C.
 
  | title = Sodium and Potassium Secretion by Iguana Salt Glands
 
  | work = Iguanas: Biology and Conservation
 
  | publisher = University of California Press
 
  | pages = 84-85
 
  | date=  2004
 
  | isbn = 9780520238541
 
  }}
 
</ref>  As Green iguanas are not capable of creating liquid urine more concentrated than their bodily fluids, like birds they excrete nitrogenous wastes as urate salts through a [[salt gland]]. <ref name="Hazard"/>  As a result, Green iguanas have developed a lateral [[nose|nasal]] gland to supplement renal salt secretion by expelling excess potassium and sodium chloride.<ref name="Hazard"/>
 
  
Green iguanas from [[Guatemala]] and southern Mexico have small horns on their snouts between their eyes and their nostrils, whereas others do not.<ref name="Samuelson"/>  Naturalists once classified these iguanas as belonging to different [[subspecies]] (''Iguana iguana rhinolopha''); however, this classification has been found to be invalid as iguanas with similar nose projections appear randomly in other populations and interbreed freely with those that do not share this trait.<ref name="Samuelson">
+
The [[green iguana]] ''(Iguana iguana)'' is a large, [[arboreal]] [[herbivorous]] [[species]] of [[lizard]] of the [[genus]] iguana, native to [[Central America|Central]] and [[South America]].  The green iguana ranges over a large geographic area, from southern [[Brazil]] and [[Paraguay]] to as far north as [[Mexico]] and the [[Caribbean]] Islands. In the [[United States]], it exists as [[feral]] populations in [[Florida]], [[Hawaii]] and the [[Rio Grande Valley]] of [[Texas]]. The green iguana is commonly found in captivity.
{{Citation
 
  | last = Samuelson
 
  | first = Phillip
 
  | title = The Lizard King
 
  | journal = Reptiles Magazine
 
  | volume = 3
 
  | issue = 2
 
  | date= 6/1/1995
 
  | year = 1995
 
  |pages=64-84
 
}}
 
</ref><ref name="devosjoli"/>
 
[[Image:Iguana3.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Juvenile Green iguana]]
 
  
===Sexual dimorphism and reproduction===
+
The green iguana grows to 1.5 meters in length from head to tail, although a few specimens have grown more than 2 meters (6 feet) and can weigh upwards of 20 pounds (10 kg). In southern countries of their range, such as [[Peru]], green iguanas appear bluish in color with bold black markings (Samuelson 1995). On islands such as [[Bonaire]], [[Curacao]], [[Aruba]], and [[Grenada]], a green iguana's color may range from green to lavender, black, and even pink (de Vosjoli and Blair 1992; Samuelson 1995). Green iguanas from the western region of Costa Rica are red and animals of the northern ranges, such as Mexico, appear orange (de Vosjoli and Blair 1992; Samuelson 1995). Juvenile green iguanas from [[El Salvador]] are often bright blue as babies; however they lose this color as they get older (De Vosjoli and Blair 1992).
Male Green iguanas have highly developed [[femoral]] [[pores]] on the underside of their thighs which secrete a scent (females also have fermoral pores, but they are smaller in comparison to those of the males).<ref name="devosjoli">
 
{{cite book
 
  | last =De Vosjoli
 
  | first =Phillipe
 
  | coauthors = David Blair
 
  | title =The Green Iguana Manual
 
  | publisher =Advanced Vivarium Systems
 
  | date= 1992
 
  | location =Escondido, California
 
  | isbn = 74886904040 }}
 
</ref> In addition, the [[dorsal]] spines that run along a Green iguana's back are noticeably longer and thicker in males than they are in females, making the animals somewhat [[sexual dimorphism|sexually dimorphic]].<ref name="devosjoli"/>
 
  
Green iguanas are [[oviparous]] with females laying clutches of 20 to 71 eggs once per year during a synchronized nesting period.<ref name="Burghart">
+
[[Image:AA Iguana Fot Ars Summum.JPG|thumb|right|300px|A male Green iguana with spines and [[dewlap]].]]
{{cite book
+
Green iguanas possess a row of spines along their backs and along their tails that helps to protect them from predators (Samuelson 1995). Their whip-like tails can be used to deliver painful strikes and, like many other lizards, the tail can break off when grabbed, allowing the iguana to escape. In addition, iguanas have well developed [[dewlap]]s, which help regulate their body temperature (Bebler and King 1979).  It is also used in courtships and displays (de Vosjoli and Blair 1992; Samuelson 1995; Conant and Collins 1991).  
  | last = Burghart
 
  | first = Gordon
 
  | title = Iguana Research: Looking Back and Looking Ahead
 
  | work = Iguanas: Biology and Conservation
 
  | publisher = University of California Press
 
  | pages = 5-10
 
  | date=  2004
 
  | isbn = 9780520238541
 
  }}
 
</ref><ref name="SS">{{cite book |last= Capula|first= Massimo|coauthors =Behler|title= Simon & Schuster's Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of the World |year= 1989|publisher= Simon & Schuster |location= New York|isbn= 0671690981}}</ref> The female Green iguana gives no parental protection after egglaying, apart from defending the nesting burrow during excavation.<ref name="Burghart"/> In [[Panama]], the Green iguana has been observed sharing nest sites with [[American Crocodile]]s and in [[Honduras]] with [[Spectacled Caiman]]s.<ref name="Krysko"/>
 
  
The hatchlings emerge from the nest after 10-15 weeks of incubation.<ref name="Burghart"/><ref name="SS"/> Once hatched, the young iguanas look similar to the adults in color and shape, resembling adult females more so than males and lacking dorsal spines.<ref name="Burghart"/>
+
Green iguanas are [[diurnal animal|diurnal]] and arboreal and often found near water (Cogger and Zweifel 1992; Samuelson 1995). During cold, wet weather, green iguanas prefer to stay on the ground for greater warmth (Swanson 1950). They can also swim. When swimming, an iguana remains submerged and lets its four legs hang limply against its side and propels itself through the water with powerful tail strokes (Swanson 1950).
  
Juveniles stay in familial groups for the first year of their lives.<ref name="Burghart"/> Male Green iguanas in these groups often use their own bodies to shield and protect females from predators and it appears to be the only species of reptile which does this.<ref name="Rivas">
+
Because of the green iguana's popularity in the pet trade and as a food source in [[Latin America]], they are listed on the [[CITES]] Appendix II, which means that while they are not an [[endangered species]], "their trade must be controlled so as to not harm the species in the future" (CITES 2007).   
{{citation
 
  | last = Rivas
 
  | first = Jesus
 
  | last2 = Levin
 
  | first2 = Luis E
 
  | title = Sexually Dimorphic Antipredator Behavior in Juvenile Green Iguanas
 
  | work = Iguanas: Biology and Conservation
 
  | publisher = University of California Press
 
  | pages = 121
 
  | date= 2004
 
  | isbn = 9780520238541
 
  }}
 
</ref>
 
  
===Behavior===
+
[[Image:Iguana iguana 2 adults 1 young.jpg|thumb|right|400px|a young iguana with two adults in the trees]]
[[Image:Cuban Iguana head.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Reddish colored Green Iguana]]
+
Green iguanas have evolved a white photosensory organ on the top of their heads called the [[parietal eye]], which are also called a third eye, pineal eye, or pineal gland (Brames 2007).  This “eye” does not work the same way as a normal eye does, as it has only a rudimentary retina and lens and thus cannot form images (Brames 2007). It is, however, sensitive to changes in light and dark and can detect movement, helping the iguana when being stalked by predators from above (Brames 2007).
When frightened by a [[predator]], Green iguanas will attempt to flee, and if near a [[body of water]], dive into it and swim away.<ref name="Swanson"/>  If cornered by a threat, the Green iguana will extend and display the [[dewlap]] under its neck, stiffen and puff up its body, and bob its head at the aggressor.<ref name="Samuelson"/>  If the threat persists the Green iguana will lash with it's tail, bite and use its claws in defense.<ref name="Swanson"/>  Wounded animals are more inclined to fight than unijured ones.<ref name="Swanson"/>
 
  
Green iguanas use "head bobs" and dewlaps in a variety of ways in social interactions, such as greeting another iguana or to court a possible mate.<ref name="devosjoli"/>  The frequency and number of head bobs have particular meanings to other iguanas.<ref name="Samuelson"/>
+
Green iguanas from [[Guatemala]] and southern Mexico have small horns on their snouts between their eyes and their nostrils, whereas others do not (Samuelson 1995). Naturalists once classified these iguanas as belonging to different [[subspecies]] ''(Iguana iguana rhinolopha)''; however, this classification has been found to be invalid as iguanas with similar nose projections appear randomly in other populations and interbreed freely with those that do not share this trait (Samuelson 1995).
 
+
The [[Moche]] people of ancient [[Peru]] worshiped animals and often depicted Green iguanas in their art (Berrin and Larco Museum 1997).  The iguana has also been used as a food source in Central and South America for the past 7000 years.  In Central and South America, green iguanas are used as a source of meat and are often referred to as ''gallina de palo,'' "bamboo chicken" or "chicken of the tree" (Swanson 1950).
Green iguanas are preyed upon by [[hawk]]s and their fear of hawks is exploited as a ploy to catch them in the wild.<ref name="Swanson"/>  The sound of a hawk's whistle or scream makes the iguana freeze and easy to capture.<ref name="Swanson"/>
 
 
 
===Diet===
 
[[Image:La Palmyre 073.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The herbivorous Green iguana]]
 
 
 
Green iguanas are primarily [[herbivore]]s, feeding on leaves, flowers, fruit, and growing shoots of upwards of 100 different species of plant.<ref name="Burghart"/><ref name="devosjoli"/>  In Panama one of the Green iguana's favorite foods is wild plum, ''[[Spondias monbin]]''.<ref name="Swanson"/>
 
 
 
Although they will consume a wide variety of foods if offered, green iguanas are naturally [[herbivorous]] and require a precise ratio of minerals (2 to 1 calcium to phosphous) in their diet.<ref name="Rosenfeld"/><ref name="anapsid-mkdiet">{{cite web
 
  | last = Kaplan
 
  | first = Melissa
 
  | date = [[April 19]], [[2007]]
 
  | url = http://www.anapsid.org/iguana/igdiet.html
 
  | title = "'MK Diet' - The Short Version"
 
  | work = Melissa Kaplan's Herp Care Collection
 
  | publisher = [http://www.anapsid.org anapsid.org]
 
  | accessdate = 2007-06-27
 
}}</ref>  Juvenile iguanas tend to be [[insectivores]] and often eat [[feces]] from adults in order to acquire the essential [[microflora]] to digest their low-quality and hard to process diet.<ref name="Burghart"/><ref name="Swanson"/>
 
 
 
There is some debate as to whether captive Green iguanas should be fed animal protein.<ref name="devosjoli"/> There is evidence of wild iguanas eating [[grasshopper]]s and [[tree snail]]s, usually as a byproduct of eating plant material.<ref name="FLA">{{cite web
 
  | last = Meshaka
 
  | first = Walter
 
  | last2 = Bartlett
 
  | first2 = Richard
 
  | last3 = Smith
 
  | first3 = Henry
 
  | date = [[September]] [[2004]]
 
  | url = http://www.anapsid.org/adambritton.html
 
  | title = Colonization Success by Green Iguanas in Florida
 
  | work = Iguana: Journal of the International Iguana Society
 
  | publisher = State Museum of Pennsylvania, Zoology and Botany
 
}}</ref>  Wild adult Green iguanas have also been observed eating bird's eggs.<ref name="Lazell">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Lazell
 
  | first = J.D.
 
  | title = The lizard genus Iguana in the Lesser Antilles
 
  | work = Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology
 
  | location= New York
 
  |Volume=145
 
  | pages = 1-28
 
  | date=  1973
 
  }}
 
</ref>  Zoologists, such as Adam Britton, believe that such a diet containing protein is unhealthy for the animal's digestive system resulting in severe long-term health damage including kidney failure and leading to premature death.<ref name="Britton">{{cite web
 
  | last = Britton
 
  | first = Adam
 
  | date = [[April 19]], [[2007]]
 
  | url = http://www.anapsid.org/adambritton.html
 
  | title = Animal Protein and Claw Trimming"
 
  | work = Melissa Kaplan's Herp Care Collection
 
  | publisher = [http://www.anapsid.org anapsid.org]
 
  | accessdate = 2007-06-27
 
}}</ref>  On the other side of the argument is that Green iguanas at the [[Miami Seaquarium]] in [[Key Biscayne]], Florida, have been observed eating dead fish and individuals kept in captivity have been known to eat mice without any ill effects.<ref name="devosjoli"/>  De Vosjoli also writes that some animals have been known to survive and thrive on eating nothing but whole rodent block, or monkey chow, and one instance of [[Romaine lettuce]] with vitamin and calcium supplements.<ref name="devosjoli"/>
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
===Captivity===
 
''Main article: [[Green Iguana in captivity]]''
 
 
 
[[Image:GreenIguana.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A Green iguana in a terrarium]]
 
The US pet trade has put a great demand on the Green iguana; 800,000 iguanas were imported into the U.S. in 1995 alone, primarily originating from captive farming operations based in their native countries (Honduras, El Salvador, Colombia, and Panama).<ref name="nationalzoo">
 
{{citation
 
  | title =  Green Iguana
 
  | work = Reptiles and Amphibians Fact Sheets
 
  | publisher = Smithsonian National Zoological Park
 
  | url =http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Animals/ReptilesAmphibians/Facts/FactSheets/Greeniguana.cfm
 
  | date=  2007
 
  }}
 
</ref>  However, these animals are demanding to care for properly over their lifetime, and many die within a few years of acquisition.<ref name="devosjoli"/> 
 
 
 
Although, in captivity, Green Iguanas will eat meat if presented with it, excessive consumption of animal protein results in severe kidney problems and possible [[premature death]].<ref name="devosjoli"/><ref name ="Britton"/>  Misinformed pet owners tend to feed iguanas [[iceberg lettuce]], which provides iguanas with water but has no other nutritional value.<ref name="Rosenfeld"/>  A captive Green iguana's diet should consist of fresh leafy vegetables such as [[mustard greens]], [[collard greens]], [[dandelion]], [[arugula]] or [[kale]] and access to fresh water.<ref name="devosjoli"/>
 
 
 
Green iguanas will thrive only in temperatures of 79 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit (24 to 32 degrees Celsius) and must have appropriate sources of [[Ultraviolet|UVB]] and [[Ultraviolet|UVA]] lighting, or else their bodies cannot produce Vitamin D, which can result in a metabolic bone disease that can be fatal.<ref name="devosjoli"/><ref name="Rosenfeld"/>
 
In some locales([[New York City]] and [[Hawaii]]), iguanas are considered [[exotic pets]], and are prohibited from ownership.<ref name="Blood">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Blood
 
  | first = Michael R
 
  | title = Exotic Pets' Days Numbered
 
  | newspaper = New York Daily News
 
  | date=  6/30/1999
 
  }}
 
</ref>
 
<ref name="adopt">{{cite web
 
  | url = http://members2.boardhost.com/gisadoptions
 
  | title = "Green Iguana Society Adoption Board" (discussion board)
 
  | publisher = [http://www.boardhost.com/ Boardhost.com]
 
  | accessdate = 2007-06-27
 
}}</ref>  Hawaii has strict regulations regarding the import and possession of Green iguanas, violators can spend three years in jail and fined up to $200,000.<ref name="Hawaii">
 
{{Citation
 
  | title = Iguana & Illegal Lizard Turned In Under Amnesty
 
  | publisher = State of Hawaii Department of Agriculture
 
  | date= 04/16/2002
 
|url=http://www.hawaiiag.org/hdoa/newsrelease/02-08.htm
 
}}
 
</ref>  This is due to the potential impact of an introduced species on Hawaii's ecosystem.
 
 
 
===Invasive species===
 
Green iguanas are considered an [[invasive species]] in [[South Florida]] and along the gulf coast of [[Florida]] from [[Key West]] to [[Pinellas County]].<ref name ="SPT"/><ref name="Krysko">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last = Krysko
 
  | first = Kenneth L
 
  | last2 = Enge
 
  | first2 = Kevin M
 
  | last3 = Donlan
 
  | first3 = Ellen M
 
  | last4 = Seitz
 
  | first4 = Jason C
 
  | title = Distribution, Natural History, and Impacts of the Introduced Green Iguana in Florida
 
  | journal = Iguana: Conservation, Natural History, and Husbandry of Reptiles
 
  | publisher = International Reptile Conservation Foundation
 
  | volume = 14
 
  | issue = 3
 
  | year = 2007
 
  |pages=142-151
 
}}
 
</ref>  This is due to a combination of events.<ref name="Conant"/>  The original small populations in the Florida Keys were animals that had arrived there due to hurricanes and storms; others were stowaways on ships carrying fruit from South America.<ref name= "zoogoer"/>  Over the years escaped, and intentionally released, iguanas from the pet trade survived and then thrived in their new habitat.<ref name ="SPT"/> They commonly hide in the attics of houses and on beaches. They often destroy gardens and landscaping.<ref name ="SPT">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last =Lush
 
  | first =Tamara
 
  | title = Florida's Iguana Infestation
 
  | newspaper =St Petersburg Times
 
  | date= July 26,2005
 
  | year =2005
 
  | url = http://www.sptimes.com/2005/07/26/State/Florida_s_iguana_infe.shtml
 
}}</ref>  However, they seem to be fond of eating a native endangered plant, ''[[Cordia|Cordia globosa]]'' and feeding on [[Nicker nut]] (''[[Caesalpinia]]'') a primary food plant of the endangered [[Miami blue|Miami Blue Butterfly]] (''Cyclargus thomasi bethunebakeri''); additionally on [[Marco Island]], Green iguanas have been observed using the burrows of the [[Florida Burrowing Owl]], a species of special concern, all of which makes them more of a serious threat to Florida's ecosystem than originally believed.<ref name= "zoogoer">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last =Youth
 
  | first =Howard
 
  | title = Florida's Creeping Crawlers
 
  | journal =Zoogoer
 
  | volume =20
 
  | issue =3
 
  | year =2005
 
  | url = http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Publications/ZooGoer/2005/3/reptilefeature.cfm
 
}}
 
</ref><ref name="Krysko"/> 
 
 
The Green iguana is established in [[Maui]], Hawaii as a feral species (despite strict legislation)and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.<ref name="Samuelson"/><ref name="Perry">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last = Perry
 
  | first = Brian
 
  | title = Leaping lizards! Girl sights iguana in Kahului
 
  | newspaper = The Maui News
 
  | date= 04/12/2006
 
  | year = 2006
 
|url=http://www.mauinews.com/story.aspx?id=18635
 
}}
 
</ref>  As most reptiles carry [[salmonella]], this is also a concern and a reason legislation has been sought to regulate the trade in Green iguanas.<ref name="Krysko"/>
 
 
 
===Cultural references===
 
[[Image:Iguanalarcomuseum.jpg|thumb|150px|Moche Iguana. 200 C.E. [[Larco_Museum|Larco Museum Collection]] Lima, Peru.]]
 
 
 
The [[Moche]] people of ancient [[Peru]] worshipped animals and often depicted Green iguanas in their art. <ref>Berrin, Katherine & Larco Museum. ''The Spirit of Ancient Peru:Treasures from the [[Larco_Museum|Museo Arqueológico Rafael Larco Herrera]].'' New York: [[Thames and Hudson]], 1997.</ref> The iguana has also been used as a food source in Central and South America for the past 7000 years. It is believed that populations in the [[Caribbean]] were translocated there from the mainland by various tribes as a food source.<ref name="Coles"/> In Central and South America, Green iguanas are used as a source of meat and are often referred to as ''gallina de palo'', "Bamboo Chicken" or "chicken of the tree".<ref name="Swanson"/>
 
 
 
===Photos===
 
<gallery>
 
Image:Iguana iguana 2 AB.jpg | A Green iguana adult
 
Image:young_iguana.png|A young Green iguana in the wild
 
Image:Iguana iguana.jpg|A male Green iguana in the wild (BCC Panama)  
 
Image:Wizardtoilet.jpg|A pet Green iguana using a [[toilet]].
 
</gallery>
 
  
 
==Lesser Antillian iguana==
 
==Lesser Antillian iguana==
{{Taxobox | color = pink
+
[[image:Iguana delicatissima.jpg|thumb|400px|right|Lesser Antillean iguana, ''Iguana delicatissima'']]
| image = Iguana delicatissima.jpg
 
| image_width = 250px
 
| name = Lesser Antillean Iguana
 
| status = VU
 
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
 
| phylum = [[Chordata]]
 
| classis = [[reptile|Sauropsida]]
 
| ordo = [[Squamata]]
 
| familia = [[Iguanidae]]
 
| genus = ''[[Iguana]]''
 
| species = '''''I. delicatissima'''''
 
| binomial = ''Iguana delicatissima''
 
| binomial_authority = [[Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti|Laurenti]], 1768
 
}}
 
 
 
The '''Lesser Antillean Iguana''' (''Iguana delicatissima'') is one of two species of [[lizard]] of the genus ''[[Iguana]]''.  Endemic to the Lesser Antilles it is in severe decline due to habitat destruction, feral predators, hunting, and hybridization with its sister species the [[Green iguana]].
 
 
 
===Taxonomy===
 
 
 
The generic name ''Iguana'' is derived from ''Iwana'', a Spanish form of the [[Taino]] name for the species.<ref name="Coles">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Coles
 
  | first = William
 
  | title =  Green Iguana
 
  | work = U.S.V.I. Animal Fact Sheet #08
 
  | publisher = Department of Planning and Natural Resources US Virgin Islands Division of Fish and Wildlife
 
  | url = http://www.vifishandwildlife.com/Education/FactSheet/PDF_Docs/08GreenIguana.pdf
 
  | date = 2002
 
  }}
 
</ref>  Its specific name ''delicatissima'' is [[Latin]] for "extraordinary".  The species was first officially described by Austrian [[naturalist]] [[Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti]] in 1768.<ref name="Hollingsworth">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Hollingsworth
 
  | first = Bradford D.
 
  | title = The Evolution of Iguanas an Overview and a Checklist of Species
 
  | work = Iguanas: Biology and Conservation
 
  | publisher = University of California Press
 
  | pages = 40-41
 
  | date = 2004
 
  | isbn = 9780520238541
 
  }}
 
</ref>
 
  
===Distribution===
+
The [[Lesser Antillean iguana]] ''(Iguana delicatissima)'' is another of two species of [[lizard]] of the genus ''[[Iguana]]''.  Endemic to the Lesser Antilles, it is in severe decline due to habitat destruction, feral predators, hunting, and hybridization with its sister species, the [[green iguana]]. The Lesser Antillean iguana is found in scrub woodland, [[rainforest]], and [[mangrove]] throughout the [[Lesser Antilles]] on [[Anguilla]], [[St. Martin]], [[St. Eustatius]], [[Antigua]], [[Guadeloupe]], [[Dominica]], and [[Martinique]] (van den Burg et al. 2018).
The Lesser Antillean iguana is found in scrub woodland, [[rainforest]], and [[mangrove]] throughout the [[Lesser Antilles]] on [[Anguilla]], [[St. Martin]], [[St. Eustatius]], [[Antigua]], [[Guadeloupe]], [[Dominica]], and [[Martinique]].<ref name ="iucn"/>
 
  
===Anatomy and morphology===
+
Though belonging to the same genus as the [[green iguana]], the Lesser Antilles iguana has a more blocky, shortened face than the green iguana and lacks the distinctive stripe pattern present along the green iguana's tail.  The feature that most easily distinguishes these two species is the large, round scale, which the green iguana has below each ear hole, but the Lesser Antillean iguana does not.
Though belonging to the same genus as the [[Green Iguana]], the Lesser Antilles Iguana has a more blocky, shortened face than the Green Iguana and lacks the distinctive stripe pattern present along the Green Iguana's tail.  The feature that most easily distinguishes these two species is the large, round scale, which the Green iguana has below each ear hole but the Lesser Antillean iguana does not.
 
 
 
The Lesser Antillean iguana  varies in color between different island populations, but the base color tends to be gray, with green splotching on the underside.<ref name="Lazell"/>  They have large pale, ivory colored scales on their heads.  The jowls of males are pink and the scales around the eyes are blue.<ref name="Lazell"/>  Males also have femoral pores along each inner thigh that exude  [[pheromones]] during  breeding season.  Males are larger than females and are  40cm (16in) long, with an 80cm (32in) tail when full-grown.  Females are two-thirds this size.
 
 
 
===Diet===
 
Lesser Antillean  iguanas are primarily [[herbivore]]s, feeding on leaves, flowers, fruit, and growing shoots of upwards of 100 different species of plant.<ref name="Lazell">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Lazell
 
  | first = J.D.
 
  | title = The lizard genus Iguana in the Lesser Antilles
 
  | work = Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology
 
  | location= New York
 
  |Volume=145
 
  | pages = 1-28
 
  | date = 1973
 
  }}
 
</ref>  This presents a problem for [[osmoregulation]]: vegetable matter contains more [[potassium]] has less nutritional content per gram, so more must be eaten to meet the animal's metabolic needs.<ref name="Hazard">
 
{{citation
 
  | last = Hazard
 
  | first = Lisa C.
 
  | title = Sodium and Pottassium Secretion by Iguana Salt Glands
 
  | work = Iguanas: Biology and Conservation
 
  | publisher = University of California Press
 
  | pages = 84-85
 
  | date = 2004
 
  | isbn = 9780520238541
 
  }}
 
</ref>  Like most reptiles, Lesser Antillean iguanas are not capable of creating liquid urine more concentrated than their bodily fluids, like birds they excrete nitrogenous wastes as urate salts through a specially evolved [[nose|nasal]] [[salt gland]]. <ref name="Hazard"/>  As a result, the iguanas have developed this lateral nasal gland to supplement renal salt secretion by expelling excess potassium and sodium chloride.<ref name="Hazard"/>
 
 
 
===Conservation===
 
The Lesser Antillean Iguana is a vulnerable species and is found on the [[IUCN Red List]].<ref name ="iucn">
 
{{IUCN2006|assessors=Breuil, M. & Day, M.|year=1996|id=10800|title=Cyclura nubila nubila|downloaded=30 October2007}}
 
</ref>  The Lesser Antillean iguana is legally protected from hunting throughout its range, but enforcement of these regulations is extremely difficult and therefore limited. <ref name="Day"/>  Other threats include habitat loss to agriculture and development and the introduction of [[feral]] predators such as [[dog]]s, [[feral cat|cat]]s, and the [[mongoose]].<ref name="Day"/> 
 
 
 
The species greatest threat is from its own genus.<ref name="Day"/>  The Green iguana has been introduced to the Lesser Antilles as an [[invasive species]] and directly competes with the Lesser Antillean Iguana for food and resources.<ref name="Day"/>  In addition the Green iguana has been interbreeding with the Lesser Antillean Iguana and this hybridization has been the number one reason for decline on at least three of the islands: Les Iles des Saintes,  Basse Terre (Guadeloupe) and St. Barthélemy.<ref name="Day"/>
 
 
Captive Lesser Antillean iguanas are currently kept at the [[Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust]], [[Memphis Zoo]] and the [[San Diego Zoo]]’s Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species.<ref name="Day"/>  All individuals originate from the Commonwealth of Dominica.<ref name="iucn"/>  Breeding and keeping the species in captivity is difficult.  Mating and egg laying have occurred at each institution but most of the eggs have been infertile, a single individual was successfully hatched at the Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust in 1997 and in 2000 eight iguanas were hatched. <ref name="Day">
 
{{Citation
 
  | last = Day
 
  | first = Mark
 
  | last2 = Breuil
 
  | first2 = Michel
 
  | last3 = Reichling
 
  | first3 = Steve
 
  | title =Taxonomic Account Lesser Antillean iguana Iguana delicatissima
 
  | journal = IUCN Iguana Specialist Group
 
  | year = 2001
 
  | url=http://www.iucn-isg.org/actionplan/ch2/lesserantillean.php
 
|date accessed=10/31/2007
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
 
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
  
==External links==
+
The Lesser Antillean iguana varies in color between different island populations, but the base color tends to be gray, with green splotching on the underside (Lazell 1973). They have large, pale, ivory colored scales on their heads.  The jowls of males are pink and the scales around the eyes are blue (Lazell 1973).  Males are larger than females and are 40 centimeters (16 inches) long, with an 80-centimeter (32-inch) tail when full-grown.  Females are two-thirds this size.
{{Wikispecies|Iguana iguana}}
 
{{commons|Iguana iguana}}
 
  
*[http://www.anapsid.org/iguana/icfs/index.html Melissa Kaplan's Iguana Care, Feeding & Socialization]
+
Like the green iguana, Lesser Antillean iguanas are primarily [[herbivore]]s.
*[http://www.greenigsociety.org/ Green Iguana Society]
 
*[http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/iguanaiguana/interesting/ Pictures at flickr tagged with 'Iguana iguana']
 
*[http://www.niad.org National Iguana Awareness Day]
 
*[http://www.sdgl.org/ Stichting Doelgroep Groene leguanen, Dutch Green Iguana Foundation]
 
*[http://www.arubaplaza.com/enc/animals/green_iguana.php Aruba animals encyclopedia]
 
*[http://stream.realimpact.net/?file=realimpact/hsus/video_features/reptiles.smi Humane Society Video (Requires Real Player)]
 
*[http://www.corhs.org Colorado Reptile Rescue (Adoption Option)]
 
*[http://www.iguanafoundation.org International Iguana Foundation]
 
*[http://www.todaysplanet.com/pg/beta/lizardlover/page21.htm Henry Lizardlover Link]
 
*[http://pages.prodigy.net/anaconda/iguana.htm Research papers on Green iguana]
 
*[http://www.southeasternreptiles.com Florida Iguana Pictures]
 
  
 +
The Lesser Antillean iguana is a vulnerable species and is found on the [[IUCN Red List]] (van den Burg et al. 2018). While it is legally protected from hunting throughout its range, enforcement of these regulations is extremely difficult and therefore limited. Other threats include habitat loss to agriculture and development and the introduction of [[feral]] predators such as [[dog]]s and [[feral cat|cat]]s. 
  
 +
The species' greatest threat is from its own genus .  The green iguana has been introduced to the Lesser Antilles as an [[invasive species]] and directly competes with the Lesser Antillean iguana for food and resources. In addition, the green iguana has been interbreeding with the Lesser Antillean iguana and this hybridization has been the number one reason for decline on at least three of the islands: Les Iles des Saintes, Basse Terre (Guadeloupe) and St. Barthélemy.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* Frost, D.R. and R.E. Etheridge. 1989. ''A Phylogenetic Analysis and Taxonomy of Iguanian Lizards (Reptilia: Squamata)''. Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas, Museum of Natural History. ISBN 0893380334.
+
* Bebler, J. L., and F. W. King. 1979. ''The Audubon Society Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of North America''. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0394508246
* Frost, D.R.,  R. Etheridge, D. Janies and T.A. Titus. 2001. Total evidence, sequence alignment, evolution of Polychrotid lizards, and a reclassification of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania). ''American Museum Novitates''. 3343:38.
+
* Berrin, K., and Larco Museum. 1997. ''The Spirit of Ancient Peru: Treasures from the Museo Arqueológico Rafael Larco Herrera.'' New York: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0500018022 
 +
* Brames, H. 2007. Aspects of light and reptile immunity. ''Iguana: Conservation, Natural History, and Husbandry of Reptiles'' 14(1): 19-23.
 +
* CITIES. 2007. [https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php Appendices I,II, and III]. ''Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora''. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
 +
* Cogger, H., and R. Zweifel. 1992. ''Reptiles & Amphibians''. Sydney, Australia: Weldon Owen. ISBN 0831727861
 +
* Coles, W. 2002. [http://www.vifishandwildlife.com/Education/FactSheet/PDF_Docs/08GreenIguana.pdf ''Green iguana'']. ''U.S.V.I. Animal Fact Sheet #08'', Department of Planning and Natural Resources, US Virgin Islands Division of Fish and Wildlife. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
 +
* Conant, R., and J. Collins. 1991. ''A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians Eastern/Central North America''. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0395583896
 +
* De Vosjoli, P., and D. Blair. 1992. ''The Green Iguana Manual''. Escondido, California: Advanced Vivarium Systems. ISBN 74886904040
 +
* Frost, D. R., and R. E. Etheridge. 1989. ''A Phylogenetic Analysis and Taxonomy of Iguanian Lizards (Reptilia: Squamata)''. Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas, Museum of Natural History. ISBN 0893380334
 +
* Frost, D. R.,  R. Etheridge, D. Janies, and T. A. Titus. 2001. Total evidence, sequence alignment, evolution of Polychrotid lizards, and a reclassification of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania). ''American Museum Novitates''. 3343: 38.
 +
* Lazell, J. D. 1973. The lizard genus ''Iguana'' in the Lesser Antilles. ''Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology'' 145: 1-28. 
 +
* Samuelson, P. 1995. The lizard king. ''Reptiles Magazine'' 3(2): 64-84.
 +
* Swanson, P. L. 1950. The Iguana: ''Iguana iguana iguana''. ''Herpetolgica'' 6: 187-193.
 +
* van den Burg, M.P., Breuil, M.. and Knapp, C. 2018. [https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/10800/122936983 ''Iguana delicatissima'']. ''IUCN Red List of Threatened Species''. Retrieved May 28, 2021.  
  
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
[[Category:Animals]]
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[[Category:Animals]][[Category:Reptiles]]
  
 
{{Credit|Iguanidae|162063117|Iguana|169461153|Green_Iguana|169380619|Lesser_Antillean_Iguana169514387}}
 
{{Credit|Iguanidae|162063117|Iguana|169461153|Green_Iguana|169380619|Lesser_Antillean_Iguana169514387}}

Latest revision as of 23:45, 4 October 2021


Iguana
A green iguana (Iguana iguana)
A green iguana (Iguana iguana)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Iguania
Family: Iguanidae
Genus: Iguana
Laurenti, 1768
Species
  • Lesser Antillean Iguana, I. delicatissima
  • Green Iguana, I. iguana

Iguana is both the common name for several of the larger members of tropical lizards in the family Iguanidae, and the scientific name of the genus within Iguanidae comprised of two extant members, the green iguana (I. iguana) and the lesser Antillean iguana (I. delicatissima). In the broader sense, iguanas are scattered over several genera and include the desert iguana (Dipsosaurus dorsalis), the marine iguana (Amblyrhynchus cristatus), Galápagos land iguanas (genus Conolophus), and spiny-tailed iguanas (genus Ctenosaura). The iguana family, Iguanidae, also includes smaller species whose members are not called iguanas.

Iguanas provide values for the ecosystem and for humans. Ecologically, they are important to food chains, consuming largely plant matter and being eaten by various predators. For humans, they add to the wonder of nature and the green iguana has been a popular food source in Central and South America for the past 7000 years, as well as a popular pet.

The word "Iguana" is derived from a Spanish form of the original Taino name for the species, "Iwana" (Coles 2002).

Iguanidae

Iguanidae is a family of lizards composed of iguanas and related species, including the green iguana commonly kept as a pet. The term "lizard" refers to any of the numerous reptiles of the suborder Sauria (or Lacertilia) of the order Squamata. As lizards, iguanas are characterized by having less flexible jaws than snakes, movable eyelids, external ear openings, and have four-well developed limbs, as well as an integumentary system comprised of scales, with a skull composed of quadrate bones.

Marine iguanas, Amblyrhynchus cristatus], in the Galapagos Islands

In addition to iguanas, which in a general sense refer to the larger members of Iguanidae, the family includes the chuckwalla (Sauromalus obesus), the side-blotched lizards (genus Uta), and the anole (subfamily Polychrotinae, although sometimes placed in its own family Plychrotidae), among others.

Two different classification schemes have been used to define the structure of this family. These are the "traditional" classifications and the classifications presented by Frost et al. (1989).

The traditional classification is as follows:
Family Iguanidae

  • Subfamily Corytophaninae: Casquehead lizards
  • Subfamily Crotaphytinae: Collared and leopard lizards
  • Subfamily Hoplocercinae: Wood lizards, clubtails
  • Subfamily Iguaninae: Green iguanas and spinytail iguanas
  • Subfamily Leiocephalinae
  • Subfamily Leiosaurinae
  • Subfamily Liolaeminae
  • Subfamily Oplurinae: Madagascar iguanids
  • Subfamily Phrynosomatinae: Ear-less, spiny, tree, side-blotched and horned lizards
  • Subfamily Polychrotinae: Anoles
  • Subfamily Tropidurinae: Neotropical ground lizards
Galapagos land iguana, Conolophus subscritatus

.

Frost et al. (1989) redefined this family. The genera belonging to the various subfamilies were assigned to separate families. This view is not generally accepted and the "traditional" classification is still widely used. The Frost et al. (1989) system is as follows:

Family Iguanidae

  • Genus Amblyrhynchus
  • Genus Brachylophus
  • Genus Conolophus
  • Genus Ctenosaura
  • Genus Cyclura
  • Genus Dipsosaurus
  • Genus Iguana
  • Genus Sauromalus
  • Genus Armandisaurus (extinct)
  • Genus Lapitiguana (extinct)
  • Genus Pumila (extinct)

The Iguana genus includes lizards native to tropical areas of Central and South America and the Caribbean, first described by Austrian naturalist Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti in his book, Specimen Medicum, Exhibens Synopsin Reptilium Emendatam cum Experimentis circa Venena, in 1768. The genus Iguana includes two species: The green iguana and the Lesser Antillean iguana.

Green iguana

Green iguana, Iguana iguana

The green iguana (Iguana iguana) is a large, arboreal herbivorous species of lizard of the genus iguana, native to Central and South America. The green iguana ranges over a large geographic area, from southern Brazil and Paraguay to as far north as Mexico and the Caribbean Islands. In the United States, it exists as feral populations in Florida, Hawaii and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. The green iguana is commonly found in captivity.

The green iguana grows to 1.5 meters in length from head to tail, although a few specimens have grown more than 2 meters (6 feet) and can weigh upwards of 20 pounds (10 kg). In southern countries of their range, such as Peru, green iguanas appear bluish in color with bold black markings (Samuelson 1995). On islands such as Bonaire, Curacao, Aruba, and Grenada, a green iguana's color may range from green to lavender, black, and even pink (de Vosjoli and Blair 1992; Samuelson 1995). Green iguanas from the western region of Costa Rica are red and animals of the northern ranges, such as Mexico, appear orange (de Vosjoli and Blair 1992; Samuelson 1995). Juvenile green iguanas from El Salvador are often bright blue as babies; however they lose this color as they get older (De Vosjoli and Blair 1992).

A male Green iguana with spines and dewlap.

Green iguanas possess a row of spines along their backs and along their tails that helps to protect them from predators (Samuelson 1995). Their whip-like tails can be used to deliver painful strikes and, like many other lizards, the tail can break off when grabbed, allowing the iguana to escape. In addition, iguanas have well developed dewlaps, which help regulate their body temperature (Bebler and King 1979). It is also used in courtships and displays (de Vosjoli and Blair 1992; Samuelson 1995; Conant and Collins 1991).

Green iguanas are diurnal and arboreal and often found near water (Cogger and Zweifel 1992; Samuelson 1995). During cold, wet weather, green iguanas prefer to stay on the ground for greater warmth (Swanson 1950). They can also swim. When swimming, an iguana remains submerged and lets its four legs hang limply against its side and propels itself through the water with powerful tail strokes (Swanson 1950).

Because of the green iguana's popularity in the pet trade and as a food source in Latin America, they are listed on the CITES Appendix II, which means that while they are not an endangered species, "their trade must be controlled so as to not harm the species in the future" (CITES 2007).

a young iguana with two adults in the trees

Green iguanas have evolved a white photosensory organ on the top of their heads called the parietal eye, which are also called a third eye, pineal eye, or pineal gland (Brames 2007). This “eye” does not work the same way as a normal eye does, as it has only a rudimentary retina and lens and thus cannot form images (Brames 2007). It is, however, sensitive to changes in light and dark and can detect movement, helping the iguana when being stalked by predators from above (Brames 2007).

Green iguanas from Guatemala and southern Mexico have small horns on their snouts between their eyes and their nostrils, whereas others do not (Samuelson 1995). Naturalists once classified these iguanas as belonging to different subspecies (Iguana iguana rhinolopha); however, this classification has been found to be invalid as iguanas with similar nose projections appear randomly in other populations and interbreed freely with those that do not share this trait (Samuelson 1995). The Moche people of ancient Peru worshiped animals and often depicted Green iguanas in their art (Berrin and Larco Museum 1997). The iguana has also been used as a food source in Central and South America for the past 7000 years. In Central and South America, green iguanas are used as a source of meat and are often referred to as gallina de palo, "bamboo chicken" or "chicken of the tree" (Swanson 1950).

Lesser Antillian iguana

Lesser Antillean iguana, Iguana delicatissima

The Lesser Antillean iguana (Iguana delicatissima) is another of two species of lizard of the genus Iguana. Endemic to the Lesser Antilles, it is in severe decline due to habitat destruction, feral predators, hunting, and hybridization with its sister species, the green iguana. The Lesser Antillean iguana is found in scrub woodland, rainforest, and mangrove throughout the Lesser Antilles on Anguilla, St. Martin, St. Eustatius, Antigua, Guadeloupe, Dominica, and Martinique (van den Burg et al. 2018).

Though belonging to the same genus as the green iguana, the Lesser Antilles iguana has a more blocky, shortened face than the green iguana and lacks the distinctive stripe pattern present along the green iguana's tail. The feature that most easily distinguishes these two species is the large, round scale, which the green iguana has below each ear hole, but the Lesser Antillean iguana does not.

The Lesser Antillean iguana varies in color between different island populations, but the base color tends to be gray, with green splotching on the underside (Lazell 1973). They have large, pale, ivory colored scales on their heads. The jowls of males are pink and the scales around the eyes are blue (Lazell 1973). Males are larger than females and are 40 centimeters (16 inches) long, with an 80-centimeter (32-inch) tail when full-grown. Females are two-thirds this size.

Like the green iguana, Lesser Antillean iguanas are primarily herbivores.

The Lesser Antillean iguana is a vulnerable species and is found on the IUCN Red List (van den Burg et al. 2018). While it is legally protected from hunting throughout its range, enforcement of these regulations is extremely difficult and therefore limited. Other threats include habitat loss to agriculture and development and the introduction of feral predators such as dogs and cats.

The species' greatest threat is from its own genus . The green iguana has been introduced to the Lesser Antilles as an invasive species and directly competes with the Lesser Antillean iguana for food and resources. In addition, the green iguana has been interbreeding with the Lesser Antillean iguana and this hybridization has been the number one reason for decline on at least three of the islands: Les Iles des Saintes, Basse Terre (Guadeloupe) and St. Barthélemy.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bebler, J. L., and F. W. King. 1979. The Audubon Society Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of North America. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0394508246
  • Berrin, K., and Larco Museum. 1997. The Spirit of Ancient Peru: Treasures from the Museo Arqueológico Rafael Larco Herrera. New York: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0500018022
  • Brames, H. 2007. Aspects of light and reptile immunity. Iguana: Conservation, Natural History, and Husbandry of Reptiles 14(1): 19-23.
  • CITIES. 2007. Appendices I,II, and III. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
  • Cogger, H., and R. Zweifel. 1992. Reptiles & Amphibians. Sydney, Australia: Weldon Owen. ISBN 0831727861
  • Coles, W. 2002. Green iguana. U.S.V.I. Animal Fact Sheet #08, Department of Planning and Natural Resources, US Virgin Islands Division of Fish and Wildlife. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
  • Conant, R., and J. Collins. 1991. A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians Eastern/Central North America. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0395583896
  • De Vosjoli, P., and D. Blair. 1992. The Green Iguana Manual. Escondido, California: Advanced Vivarium Systems. ISBN 74886904040
  • Frost, D. R., and R. E. Etheridge. 1989. A Phylogenetic Analysis and Taxonomy of Iguanian Lizards (Reptilia: Squamata). Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas, Museum of Natural History. ISBN 0893380334
  • Frost, D. R., R. Etheridge, D. Janies, and T. A. Titus. 2001. Total evidence, sequence alignment, evolution of Polychrotid lizards, and a reclassification of the Iguania (Squamata: Iguania). American Museum Novitates. 3343: 38.
  • Lazell, J. D. 1973. The lizard genus Iguana in the Lesser Antilles. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 145: 1-28.
  • Samuelson, P. 1995. The lizard king. Reptiles Magazine 3(2): 64-84.
  • Swanson, P. L. 1950. The Iguana: Iguana iguana iguana. Herpetolgica 6: 187-193.
  • van den Burg, M.P., Breuil, M.. and Knapp, C. 2018. Iguana delicatissima. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved May 28, 2021.

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