Endemic to the Lesser Antilles and a protected species in Guadeloupe and Martinique.
Classified as endangered on the IUCN Red List (2000 assessment).
Size varies by island, reaching up to 1.6 meters long, with the tail representing about 70% of total length.
Robust body; can move in trees and swim.
Four clawed limbs allow climbing and digging nests.
Herbivorous: feeds on leaves, flowers, and fruits from various trees and shrubs.
Features: a series of uniform scales on the lower jaw extending to the snout; a dewlap under the throat used for communication and dominance, sometimes with up to 10 spines.
Distinct from the green iguana by its unstriped tail and absence of a large tympanic scale.
Coloration changes with age, sex, and social status:
Juveniles: bright apple green.
Subadult and adult females: matte green, darker green, or grayish-green.
Dominant males: dark gray, brown, or nearly black.
Reproduction: females lay eggs in sunny, well-drained sandy areas, digging tunnel nests about 1 meter long.
Habitat :
Found from sea level up to 300 m altitude.
In Guadeloupe: dry scrublands, coastal dry forests, humid ravines intersecting banana plantations, and degraded back-beach mangroves.
On dry islands, closely associated with coastal areas.
Threats :
Once widespread from Anguilla to Martinique.
Major threats: habitat destruction, hunting, introduced predators, and hybridization with the green iguana (Iguana iguana).
Currently restricted to a few sites in Guadeloupe, Martinique, and Dominica.