A new species of land iguana found in the Galapagos07/01/2009 09:29:32Dr Gentile holding a pink iguana. Credit Gabriele Gentile January 2009. A species of pink land iguana overlooked by Charles Darwin during his visits to the Galápagos Islands may provide evidence of the ancient animal's diversification in the archipelago. Park rangers first noted the presence of a pink variety of iguana on the slopes of Volcano Wolf on the island of Isabela in 1986, but it was not until 2000 that scientists began to examine it. On his visit to the Galápagos Islands in 1835, Darwin failed to explore the Volcan Wolf volcano on the island of Isabela, the only home of the "rosada" iguana, a newly identified species of the land iguana Conolophus. Ancient divergence Pink iguana male. Credit Gabriele Gentile. Critically Endangered Dr Gentile said "Our studies would indicate that the population size is very small. We only collected 36 during the two years study; and last year a large research team hiked up Wolf Volcano and only found 10, and most of those were ones that we'd marked earlier." These numbers are low enough to make rosada a Critically Endangered species. Female pink Iguana. Credit Gabriele Gentile. Wolf Volcano, Galapagos. Credit Gabriele Gentile.
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