Recent cold weather in Florida has caused invasive green iguanas to die and fall from trees as they decay. Iguanas, which are not native to Florida, can become paralyzed when temperatures fall below ...
When the temperatures fall and remain near-freezing or lower, reptiles and amphibians, including nonnative green iguanas can ...
In Florida, winter can arrive with a sweater, a space heater and, on some mornings, a lizard dropping from a tree. The image of a rigid iguana on a sidewalk has long been treated as one of the state’s ...
A rare Florida cold front stunned and killed thousands of invasive iguanas, but wildlife experts warn the population is likely to rebound due to their high reproductive rate.
Recent extreme freezing temperatures unseen for over a century in Florida resulted in live, cold-stunned green iguanas literally dropping from trees.
While an untold number of iguanas awoke from a cold-stunned torpor to continue on with their life, those that succumbed to the chill may be in trees.
The odds of a frozen 10-pound reptile crash-landing on its head in front of you is unlikely, but this time of year in Florida, the chance may be higher than you think. Green iguanas are not native to ...
According to a new executive order from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, FWC, special regulations allow people to temporarily remove live, cold-stunned green iguanas from the ...
When Florida temperatures drop, iguanas can become paralyzed and fall from trees. While many are alive, there are many that didn't make it.
The winter freeze that embraced the sunshine state for several days caused iguanas to fall from trees as the frigid temperatures stunned the invasive species. Green iguanas are listed as an invasive ...
A Florida restaurant that went viral for selling iguana pizza said it would scale back production after receiving backlash ...