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Uninhabited Caribbean islet blossoms into love nest for critically endangered iguana

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) – Silence used to prevail in the forest of a private Caribbean islet until environmentalists transformed it into a love nest for the critically endangered Lesser Antillean iguana.

19 December 2025
By DÁNICA COTO
19 December 2025

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) – Silence used to prevail in the forest of a private Caribbean islet until environmentalists transformed it into a love nest for the critically endangered Lesser Antillean iguana.

Now, the sounds of iguanas plopping on the ground and scurrying about as they multiply are making scientists smile.

“It’s something that’s ours,” said Devon Carter, a research officer with the nonprofit Anguilla National Trust. “We don’t have lions, we don’t have elephants, but what we do have, we need to appreciate.”

The population of the Lesser Antillean iguana, also known as Iguana delicatissima, was zero on Prickly Pear East Cay nearly a decade ago.

But scientists in nearby Anguilla who were determined to save the species from extinction tucked 10 iguanas into small, breathable cotton bags and ferried them by boat to the cay with no predators in hopes they would breed.

And breed they did. The population has surged to 300 and counting, converting the cay into one of five sites worldwide where the iguana is trying to make a comeback. It is estimated that there are fewer than 20,000 species remaining, according to conservation groups.

“Prickly Pear East has become a beacon of hope for these gorgeous lizards and proves that when we give native wildlife the chance, they know what to do,” said Jenny Daltry, Caribbean alliance director for the conservation groups Fauna & Flora and Re:wild.

Indigenous people are estimated to have arrived in the eastern Caribbean roughly 7,000 years ago.

The Lesser Antillean iguanas were already there, likely having reached the islands by floating atop debris spewed by rivers that had burst their banks in South America, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

At the time, the iguanas inhabited some 10 islands, but they are now extinct on Antigua, Barbuda, St. Kitts, Nevis and St. Martin, and have largely vanished from Guadeloupe, St. Barts and Martinique, according to the Re:wild conservation group.

Its biggest threat? The green, or stripe-tailed, iguana. Originally from Central and South America, it was introduced to Guadeloupe in the 1800s and then spread to other islands thanks to Hurricane Luis, which pummeled the northeast Caribbean in 1995.

The green iguanas have more offspring, they are more territorial and they eat more food than the Lesser Antillean iguanas.

But the biggest issue is that both species mate with each other.

“It really jeopardizes the genetic viability,” said Isabel Curtis, a conservation officer with Anguilla National Trust. “If your genetics are diluted, your species as a whole can’t continue.”

So in 2015, scientists in Anguilla armed themselves with long poles with a noose at the end to lasso Lesser Antillean iguanas and transport them to Prickly Pear East, where there are no dogs, cats, traffic, green iguanas or other deadly threats.

Residents would call in sightings or take pictures to help with the search.

“We spent a good year looking for iguanas,” recalled Farah Mukhida, executive director of Anguilla National Trust. “It’s all done by hand.”

After one year, scientists captured 23 Lesser Antillean iguanas in Anguilla, a number believed to be almost the island’s entire population of that species.

The iguanas were genetically tested to ensure they were full breeds and then the first 10 were tagged and released on nearby Prickly Pear East, Mukhida said.

Once that population seemed to adapt well to its new home, scientists released the remaining 13 iguanas.

“We were seeing babies, we were seeing their burrows where they were nesting,” Mukhida recalled. “It was really encouraging that they were breeding.”

Lesser Antillean iguanas are bright green when young but morph into a slate gray or dusty black as adults, with a lifespan of more than 20 years in the wild.

But concerns remained despite the successful breeding.

Scientists reached out to officials in the eastern Caribbean island of Dominica to obtain more female iguanas in a bid to boost the genetic diversity of the lizards procreating in Prickly Pear East. Dominica has the region’s largest population of Lesser Antillean iguanas, but they too are now threatened by green iguanas that arrived after Hurricane Maria hit the region in 2017.

The petition was sent during the pandemic, so Carter and other scientists had to quarantine first before traveling to Dominica. Once there, they built homes for the captured iguanas, monitored their health and ran DNA tests to make sure they weren’t hybrid iguanas.

They fed the iguanas flowers, pumpkins and carrots, although some had to be hand-fed with a syringe, Carter recalled with a laugh.

“Those are the ones you remember the most,” he said, adding that he nicknamed one of them “Green.”

The captured iguanas were then flown out of Dominica in a special type of pillowcase and boxes with lots of breathing holes and landed in Anguilla, where they were then whisked by boat to Prickly Pear East.

Curtis said saving the Lesser Antillean iguanas is important to maintain biodiversity: “Each species has a specific function.”

They are now breeding across Prickly Pear East. It remains uninhabited but welcomes boaters to the cay’s only two restaurants, which sell barbecued chicken, ribs and lobster. Iguanas are not on the menu.

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