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Fijian Crested Iguana

Scientific nameBrachylophus vitiensis

Conservation status (IUCN)

Critically Endangered

Visitor tips for Sydney

You can see a Fijian Crested Iguana in ARC. 

Did you know?

Found in the Yasawa and Mamanuca Island groups in Western Fiji. 
Females can be anywhere from 35-82cm long, where males can be from 37-69cm. 
The Fijian Crested Iguana can lay 2-4 eggs in a clutch
Tropical dry forests
Habitat loss, invasive predators, weeds, climate change
Found in the Yasawa and Mamanuca Island groups in Western Fiji. 
Females can be anywhere from 35-82cm long, where males can be from 37-69cm. 
The Fijian Crested Iguana can lay 2-4 eggs in a clutch
Tropical dry forests
Habitat loss, invasive predators, weeds, climate change

Species management programs 

Taronga contributes to an Australasian Species Management Program and/or international breeding program for this species. This helps maintain healthy and resilient zoo-based animal populations by preserving genetic diversity, supporting animal husbandry knowledge, and ensuring exceptional animal welfare, safeguarding the species for the future.
 

Conservation status (IUCN)

Critically Endangered

Saving the Fijian Crested Iguana

For more than 20 years, Taronga has worked to save the Fijian Crested Iguana.  
Former Taronga Ecologist Dr Peter Harlow wrote the IUCN recovery program to guide conservation efforts. Taronga’s support for the species’ survival has included developing a pest eradication program on its native Monuriki Island, devising the re-introduction program for iguanas bred in care in Fiji, and scientific monitoring to assess reintroduction survival rates. 
  
Taronga works with other Zoos in Australia as part of a Species Management Program for Fijian Crested Iguanas, which could allow for reintroduction into the wild should a catastrophic event occur to the wild population in Fiji.  

Fijian Crested Iguana deep dive

Discover more about what makes these iguanas so incredible!

WATCH: Iguana lunch time!

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