| The
Little Cayman Rock Iguana (Cyclura nubila caymanensis) is
to be found solely on Cayman Brac and Little Cayman. It is a subspecies of the Cuban Rock Iguana.
This large lizard, grey-brown
with black markings, has red eyes and a row of spines which run from
the back of the head to the tip of the tail.
The male is larger than the female and has substantial jaw muscles
giving it a very strong bite! They are, however, vegetarian, foraging
for fruits, flowers and leaves.
Iguanas never stop growing, although
the growth rate does slow down with age. Adults of five feet in length
from nose to tail are not uncommon.
They are not sociable creatures and tend to live alone, not encouraging
others to stay in their chosen area. When feeling threatened, iguanas
turn themselves sideways to the foe, draw themselves up as high as
possible
on their four legs and flatten their bodies laterally so that the
area they expose to their opponent is as large as possible. Fierce
fights
do occur, especially during mating season amongst males who are aggressive
from a very early age.
The behaviour of males and females leading
up to the short mating season (usually the first two weeks in May)
is markedly different.
The female
selects an area with enough food supplies to sustain her which
is also suitable for her nest. This is particularly crucial as the
eggs
will
not hatch if they get too hot, too wet or too dry. Males, on the
other hand, roam widely and can cover the territories of many females,
ready
to mate with each as they come into season. Much of their time
is spent warding off rivals, which means that the largest and strongest
of the
males mate most frequently. This behaviour continues into late
May,
until all the females cease to be receptive and the males gradually
loose interest.
Six weeks after mating, the female will excavate
her nest in a patch of earth and lay her eggs which are about the
size of a hen's
egg.
Young females lay fewer eggs in a clutch than mature mothers
who can produce
as many as 15 or 20 eggs at a time. The tunnel leading to the
egg chamber is carefully filled in and disguised with leaves, grasses
and other
debris. The female then guards her nest site for a few more weeks
to ensure the
safety of her brood. The whole process takes a lot out of the
iguana
and by this time she can be quite emaciated and gaunt. She must
roam more widely to feed and build up her strength again. This
explains
to a large extent why females are never as large as the males.
After
an incubation period of about ten weeks, the baby iguanas start to
hatch. At birth they are already about eight inches
long, having
been curled up tight inside the egg. The hatchlings wait until
all their brothers
and sisters are also hatched, each drawing nourishment from
its egg sac, before exiting the nest using their joint strength to
dig their
way to
the surface.
Once out in the open air, they quickly scatter
into the undergrowth. Each must then fend for itself. The young iguanas
are
very vulnerable to birds and snakes (their main predators)
at
this stage,
although they grow extremely fast.
It is a sad fact that the
major problems facing Cayman's iguanas are human related. When the
first settlers arrived
on Cayman
Brac about
200 years ago, they brought their domestic dogs with them.
The dogs soon
learned that killing iguanas was an exciting way to get
an extra meal. A once abundant iguana population has now been
reduced
to a few tens
of survivors. Now another domestic animal threatens to
be the death knell for the iguana population on Cayman Brac:
feral
cats are
now found in
huge numbers, and they eagerly pursue juvenile iguanas.
Happily,
Little Cayman's iguana population remains healthy, with
about 2,500 animals roaming throughout the island.
But for how
long is uncertain.
The same pattern of development that has almost destroyed
the iguanas elsewhere can be seen beginning here too,
and at a
much faster
rate. Coastal nesting habitat is being taken over by
housing development, feral cats are becoming established, and the
first dogs are now
resident
on
the island. Increasing traffic on the roads is killing
several adult iguanas every year. If preventative measures
are not
taken soon,
it is inevitable that Little Cayman's now abundant iguanas
will follow Grand
Cayman's Blue Iguana to the brink of extinction.
Wild
iguanas are an important asset to Little Cayman's tourism market,
and so should be recognized as having
an indirect,
but substantial,
economic value. If such assets are to be retained to
provide ongoing benefit to
everyone, it will be necessary to retain significant
natural areas of Little Cayman undeveloped, to implement
strong
measures to prevent
uncontrolled
breeding of cats and roaming by unrestrained dogs,
and to enforce conservative speed limits on all roads to
minimize the risks
of road kills. It is
ultimately for the people of the Cayman Islands to
decide whether they wish to keep the native iguana and other
vulnerable wildlife
as part
of their natural surroundings, and whether they are
prepared to accept reasonable limitations on development to make
this
possible.
The tiny iguana population surviving on Cayman
Brac is too small to be regarded as viable in the long term.
It may eventually
be possible to
restock Cayman Brac with iguanas from Little Cayman,
but this would be doomed to failure if the original
causes
of the decline
on Cayman
Brac
are not controlled. Before Cayman Brac's iguanas
have a
hope for recovery,
a concerted effort to reduce the thousands of feral
cats, many living in hunger and misery in the woodlands,
must
first be
undertaken.
Last update: October 6, 2006
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