Galapagos volcano’s eruption raises fear for world’s only colony of rare pink iguanas
A volcano in the Galapagos Islands has erupted for the first time in more than 30 years, spilling streams of bright orange lava and raising fears for the world’s only colony of pink iguanas.

A volcano in the Galapagos Islands has erupted for the first time in more than 30 years, spilling streams of bright orange lava and raising fears for the world’s only colony of pink iguanas.
The Galapagos National Park warned on Twitter on Monday that Isabela Island, where Wolf Volcano erupted at dawn, holds “the world’s only population” of the critically endangered Conolophus marthae, also known as the Galapagos rosy iguana.
But the park later said the iguanas’ habitat on the volcano’s northwest side may be out of danger.
The iguanas, “which share the habitat with yellow iguanas and giant Chelonoidis becki tortoises, are situated on the northwest flank, which raises hopes that they will not be affected,” it said in a statement.
