Unique pink iguanas endangered by Galapagos Wolf Volcano eruption (VIDEO)

The Wolf volcano spews smoke and lava on Isabela Island, in this May 25, 2015 handout photograph provided by the Galapagos National Park. (Reuters/Galapagos National Park/Diego Paredes)

The Wolf volcano spews smoke and lava on Isabela Island, in this May 25, 2015 handout photograph provided by the Galapagos National Park. (Reuters/Galapagos National Park/Diego Paredes)

The world’s only population of a unique species of pink iguanas could be at risk after the Wolf Volcano, located on Ecuador’s Isabela Island, began erupting in the early hours of Monday morning after 33 years of inactivity.

According to a statement
released on social media by Galapagos National Park, the
eruption, located in a unpopulated area on the largest island of
the Galapagos, poses a potential threat to a population of some
500 pink iguanas that inhabit the area around the volcano.

“The volcano is not located near a populated area,” the
Park said. “There is no risk for the human population,”
the Twitter post elaborated, however, stating “the only
population of pink iguanas in the world” lived there.

So far the lava is flowing down the volcano’s southern face, the
Environment Ministry said in a statement. The endangered lizards
are based on the northern face of the mountain, so unless the
pattern changes, the pink iguanas are likely to escape harm.

However, the lava can harm marine life once it reaches the ocean,
the country’s Geophysics Institute said, adding that populated
areas of the island could suffer consequences from the ash cloud.

At a height of some 1.7 kilometers (5,500 feet), Wolf Volcano is
the highest point on the Galapagos Islands. The eruption sent a
dark plume into the sky to an estimated altitude of 10 km (33,000
feet).

The Galapagos Islands are located in the Pacific Ocean, some
1,000 kilometers off the coast of Ecuador. Its isolated volcanic
archipelago terrain shelters a diversity of plant and animal
species, many found nowhere else on the planet. Pink iguanas
reside together with yellow iguanas and giant tortoises.

Leave a comment