TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — The Forestry and Nature Conservation Agency, working with local governments, culled around 260,000 ...
Benjamin Hill travels the nation collecting stories about what makes Minor League Baseball unique. This excerpt from the ...
It’s totally going first ballot into the name hall of fame, right beside GTA VI’s Vice City Manatees (the game’s version of ...
Iguanas are an invasive species in Florida that anecdotally appear to be growing in numbers although there are no good counts of their population statewide. They are a nuisance because they eat ...
Florida rang in the New Year under an Arctic chill — and the cold delivered one of the Sunshine State’s strangest spectacles: iguanas falling from the sky. A sharp cold snap sent temperatures plunging ...
Cold weather in the Fort Myers-Naples area may cause invasive iguanas to fall from trees. Temperatures below 50 degrees can incapacitate cold-blooded reptiles like iguanas and cane toads. While the ...
Temperatures across Florida are dropping and that means iguanas may drop from the trees. According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, when temperatures fall to near-freezing or ...
The green iguana is one of the state’s most prolific and conspicuous invasive species with its spikey mohawk, mossy color and prehistoric persona. But during the holiday season, the hides of some of ...
The color change is not only a signal to the opposite sex, but a testament to the invasive animal's adaptivity to the Floridian climate Getty Male green iguanas turn orange during the breeding season ...
Florida's battle with various invasive species has launched an increasingly popular method for controlling populations of non-native green iguanas across the state — and it involves diving in ...
The small and uninhabited islet of Prickly Pear East is not what you might describe as a romantic holiday destination, but for the Lesser Antillean iguana, it has proved to be just that. Thanks to an ...
Iguanas are considered an invasive pest in Southwest Florida. An iguana hunter named John Johnson is working to reduce their population. Johnson uses a pneumatic gun for what he describes as a humane ...