The sculpture came to the zoo in 2007 on loan from Lee Bass, the husband of Fort Worth Zoo board chair Ramona Bass.
January in Florida is typically "frozen iguana" season or when we feel cold temps. Is anyone in the ocean this time of year?
As temperatures plunge in Florida, residents are being urged to keep an eye out for stunned iguanas falling from trees.
Iggy, a giant iguana that has sat perched on the Zoo's animal hospital for 15 years, is coming down to be refurbished, the ...
The marine iguana is found only in the Galápagos Islands. From their sleek swimming skills underwater to their clumsy movements on land, they're perfectly adapted to their marine environment.
MIAMI - It's a South Florida phenomenon that draws amusement from across the country — when temperatures drop below a certain ...
The cold-blooded reptiles, which rely on external heat sources to regulate their body temperature, are falling into a hibernation-like state during cold snaps.
The cold-blooded reptiles, which rely on external heat sources to regulate their body temperature, are falling into a ...
"It’s gonna happen," biologist Joe Wasilewski warned. "If it’s in the 50s, they’re slow. If it’s in the 40s, they’re on the ...
Iguanas, like all non-native, invasive species, are not protected in Florida except by anti-cruelty law and can be humanely ...
South Florida faces an Arctic blast and polar vortex. Will this cold snap lead to an ultimate measure of cold weather here?
The Fort Worth Zoo’s iconic iguana sculpture is now in hibernation, you might say, as it undergoes a major makeover.