Iguanas are falling out of trees in Florida. But here's why you shouldn't try to 'save' them.

When temperatures drop, so do the invasive green reptiles. Here’s everything you need to know about cold-stunned iguanas.

A person holds an iguana in front of the water in a residential neighborhood as a cold front moves across South Florida.
A person holds an iguana in a residential neighborhood as a cold front moves across South Florida on February 1, 2026, in Downtown Miami. 
ByJason Bittel
Photographs byAlfonso Duran
Published February 3, 2026

The odds of a frozen 10-pound reptile crash-landing on its head in front of you is unlikely, but this time of year in Florida, the chance may be higher than you think. 

Green iguanas are not native to Florida but were introduced to the Sunshine State in the 1960s. Since then, the large, dinosaur-like reptiles have made themselves at home across the south and central regions, lazing about on backyard fences, moving through canals, and gobbling up many an ornamental garden plant. 

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An iguana lies on the ground in a residential neighborhood as a cold front moves across South Florida.
A cold-stunned iguana lies on the ground. Due to their inability to regulate body temperature, iguanas enter a state of torpor when temperatures drop, causing them to lose their grip on branches and fall from trees.
South Florida iguana removal companies, including Redline Iguana Removal, collect hundreds of cold-stunned and dead iguanas during a cold snap on Sunday and Monday, Feb. 2, 2026, in Pembroke Pines, Florida.
A man holds four iguanas by their tails in Pembroke Pines, Florida. South Florida iguana removal companies, including Redline Iguana Removal, collected hundreds of cold-stunned and dead iguanas during the February cold snap.
Pres Rodriguez discovered a frozen iguana on his balcony after stepping outside on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026, in Miami, Florida.
A person holds a cold-stunned iguana, exposing its belly. Pres Rodriguez discovered a frozen iguana on his balcony after stepping outside on February 1, 2026 in Miami.

While the Western Hemisphere’s largest lizard is capable of violence, with sharp teeth and powerful, whip-like tails, these slow-moving animals mostly keep to themselves. That is, except for when a cold snap moves through the region, slamming the brakes on the iguanas’ metabolism and ultimately turning them into scaly projectiles. 

“The phenomenon of cold stunning is not unique to green iguanas,” says Natalie Claunch, a wildlife biologist with the USDA Wildlife Services National Wildlife Research Center. “But the phenomenon of observing them falling from trees during these events is due to them being established in a climate outside of their native range and without many of their natural predators.”

What happens to a cold-stunned iguana?

Like all reptiles, green iguanas are ectotherms. Ectotherms’ body temperatures are mostly determined by the external environment, rather than creating their own heat like mammals.

In turn, an iguana’s body temperature influences its internal processes, such as its metabolism.

“During a cold spell, these processes will slow down and can reach a torpor-like state, where their heart rate and breathing rates are slowed down [A1] [JB2] and overall signaling in the body is slowed as a result,” says Claunch.

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On the ground, this would mean slower reaction times and perhaps the inability to run away from danger. 

But for green iguanas stretched out in a backyard tree? A loss of motor function can render them unable to maintain a grip on a branch or tree trunk. And that’s when the lizards start falling out of the sky.

Human injuries have been reported, however the state of Florida does not keep an official count. 

What temperature causes a cold stunning in iguanas?

According to Claunch, cold stunning temperatures can vary based on a reptile’s size, the rate of temperature change, and prior experience with cold events. 

“For example, a small iguana has a lower surface area and would reach a colder internal body temperature faster compared to a large iguana,” she says.

A pile of immobile iguanas.
More than 80 iguanas lie cold-stunned in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Frozen iguanas piled on a sidewalk in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Iguanas lie on a sidewalk in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Iguanas become paralyzed when temperatures drop as they are cold-blooded reptiles that cannot regulate their own body temperature.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission temporarily lifted restrictions, allowing the public to trap iguanas, a non-native invasive species, on Monday, Feb. 2, 2026 In Sunrise, FL.
Green iguanas fall out of a bag onto a table in Sunrise, Florida. Florida's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission temporarily lifted iguana restrictions on January 30, allowing the public to trap the invasive species. 

No researchers have studied this specifically under the controlled conditions in a lab. 

“However, iguanas in Florida have been observed falling into cold stuns when ambient temperatures fall below 50 degrees Fahrenheit,” says Claunch.

Does cold stunning hurt iguanas?

Unless the iguana has fallen from a relatively great height or landed poorly, the animal may be better off than you think. Arboreal animals do occasionally misjudge a leap or fall out of their treetop perches, after all, and are often better adapted to survive and minimize the impact of those injuries.

Of course, cold stunned iguanas can be easy pickings for predators and even pets. But it’s when cold temperatures persist that the animals start to really incur harm. 

“Prolonged exposure to cold temperatures can be detrimental to reptiles in that they become more susceptible to infection while their immune system is slowed down,” says Claunch. 

How long will it take a cold stunned iguana to ‘wake up’?

Iguanas regain consciousness and resume normal activity faster than you may think. 

It’s for this reason that Shannon Knowles, communications director for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, advises against trying to save a green iguana by bringing it into your home or car. 

“Iguanas can recover from torpor quickly,” she says. “Wild iguanas can be defensive when not able to escape, sometimes using their sharp teeth and nails, and long tails that whip.”

It’s also important to keep pets away from the wild animals, lest they wake up and try to defend themselves. 

What should you do if you find a cold-stunned iguana?

Because green iguanas are not native to Florida, the state does not monitor their harvest. This means that it is legal to remove them from your property and even kill the animals, if done so humanely. (Iguanas do have protections under Florida’s anti-cruelty laws.) 

For the adventurous-minded, many people swear by an unconventional removal method—lunch. 

Two people each add frozen iguana to a bin.
Two people hold iguanas over a bucket. Urban Greenworks, a nonprofit urban farm, sold iguanas for consumption on February 1, 2026 in Liberty City, Miami, Florida.
An iguana lies on the ground.
This cold-stunned iguana lies paralyzed on the ground as a cold front moves across south Florida.

In the Caribbean, where iguanas are native, they are sometimes referred to as "pollo de los árboles," or chicken of the trees. After all, iguana eggs are primarily composed of yolk, with very little albumen, making them a handy omelets ingredient. Green iguana meat is also high in protein, as well as omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids. 

While it may be scary that an animal weighing as much as a bowling ball can fall out of the trees and onto your head, the fact that green iguanas can’t handle the cold is one of the only things keeping them from disrupting ecosystems across the rest of the United States. 

In this way, iguana falling season may be something to celebrate, too. 

Jason Bittel is a National Geographic Explorer and author of Grizzled: Love Letters to 50 of North America’s Least Understood Animals, which will be published by National Geographic Books on March 3, 2026.