Most iguanas live in the Americas. But scientists have found evidence some floated to Fiji, likely snacking on their raft ...
Around 34 million years ago, iguanas traveled one-fifth of the way around the world from the western coast of North […] ...
Fiji, an archipelago of over 300 islands in the South Pacific, is a biodiversity hotspot teeming with unique and often ...
By floating on a raft of downed trees and broken branches, according to a study published Monday in the journal PNAS. The ...
However, the four iguana species found on the Pacific islands of Fiji and Tonga are a bit of an outlier. They sit there in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and scientists have long debated how they ...
The researchers conducted a comprehensive genetic analysis, examining over 4,000 genes from 200 iguanian specimens.
Most modern-day iguanas live in the Americas – thousands of miles and one giant ocean away. They thought maybe they scurried there via Asia or Australia before volcanic activity pushed Fiji so ...
and then they caught the ocean currents and rafted over," Scarpetta said. The Fiji iguanas are an outlier All told, there are over 2,100 species in the suborder Iguania, a large group that also ...
A genetic analysis of the world's iguanas may have just solved an enduring mystery of how the creatures ended up in Fiji.
Most modern-day iguanas live in the Americas – thousands of miles and one giant ocean away. They thought maybe they scurried there through Asia or Australia before volcanic activity pushed Fiji ...
Most modern-day iguanas live in the Americas — thousands of miles and one giant ocean away. They thought maybe they scurried there through Asia or Australia before volcanic activity pushed Fiji ...