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Close call for rare pink iguanas after volcanic eruption

By kingsnake.com · June 16, 2015 5:40 am

Lava from a volcanic eruption in the Galapagos is flowing away from the only known habitat of pink iguanas. From Newsweek:
Isabela is a mostly uninhabited island that, along with the rest of the Galapagos, lies about 560 miles west of Ecuador in the Pacific Ocean. It’s home to the incredible diversity of life that helped inform Charles Darwin’s theories of evolution when he visited the area in 1835. Luckily, it appears that the iguanas are not in any immediate danger. The Galapagos National Park released a statement that these pink animals, along with their cousins the yellow iguanas and Galapagos giant tortoises, are not “expected to be affected.” The park reports that the lava is largely flowing onto the southeastern portion of the summit; the iguanas live on the northern flank of the volcano.
Read more here.

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