Green Iguana
Iguana iguana
Reptiles Alive Name: Fritz & Juan Amigo
Hisstory: Fritz is leasing a room with us as his owner, our curator Jennifer, likes having him at work better than having him at home. Juan Amigo was left at the Alexandria Animal Shelter and we adopted him in April 2010.
Reptiles Alive Diet: Greens, vegetables, some fruit and a special zoo food made for iguanas.
Natural Diet: Leaves, flowers, and fruit.
Range: Mexico, Central and South America. Introduced into Florida and Hawaii.
Habitat: The canopy of tropical rain forests is the normal habitat of iguanas, but they can also be found in urban areas around homes and hotels.
Size: These huge lizards grow 5-7 feet long from nose to tail and can weigh up to 18 pounds.
Lifespan: Iguanas often live over 20 years.
Reproduction: A female iguana will lay 12-40 eggs buried in the forest floor. The eggs take 90-120 days to incubate. Babies spend the first part of their life in the under story. They will climb up to the canopy as they grow bigger.
Conservation: Iguanas face threats from the loss of habitat, the pet trade, and they are sometimes hunted for food.
You should know: Iguanas are commonly kept as pets, but most pet iguanas either die from improper care or are abandoned when they get large. Many pet stores buy iguanas bred in “puppy mill” conditions, and sell them for low prices to unsuspecting buyers and without the proper equipment. (Proper iguana housing costs over 500 dollars.) Iguanas have sharp teeth, a strong bite, sharp claws, and do NOT make good pets, especially for children. Thousands are euthanized annualy because proper homes cannot be found for them.
Cool Facts: Iguanas have a big flap of skin under their chin called a dewlap. They communicate to each other by lowering their dewlap and bobbing their head up and down. When threatened, iguanas can whip their spiky tail like a dinosaur. If that doesn’t work, they will leap out of the tall trees and dive into a river below. They tuck their legs against their bodies and swim like crocodiles.



I think it’s terrible that so many iguanas are improperly cared for or bred so prolifically, especially if proper homes cannot be found. Why keep breeding if you have to destroy the reptiles later on? I have had several iguanas and it does require quite a bit of money to care for them, especially when it comes to housing a full-grown iguana. You need big cages that are properly ventilated. Cages By Design sells the best iguana cages and reptile cages I have ever seen. The quality of their reptile cages are much better than other companies I’ve bought from in the past. If you’re serious about taking care of your iguanas properly, check out their website: http://www.cagesbydesign.com
Joe,
Iguanas are truly the most common reptile we are contacted about. They are tough to properly take care of, and many people sadly give them up. Thank you for the suggestion about proper housing. Cages by Design do have large and lovely housing. We built our own years before any company offered nice big reptile cages. Now there are several companies out there that offer large enclosures. Horay!