some adaptations are:
they adapted to the heat of lava rocks on hot days,
they can shrink their skeliton so food is more usefull
and their clawa are adapted to gripping slick or dry lava rocks
No, it is a reptile.
they are cold blooded
yes, an iguana is cold blooded that means it has to stay hot and warm from 130 to 100 degrees during the day with a uvb ray light so it gets its vitamin d3 and at night 70-80 degrees depending on how green you iguana is.
It needs to be warmed up and quickly. Take a towel and put it in your clothes dryer for a little while to heat it up a bit you don't want it too hot because it might but the iguana. Then drape it over the iguana very carefully. Or if it is in a cage you could use heat lamps or if you don't have any then the warm towel and place it over the iguana. It will seek the heat. If it's a wild iguana you must be extremely careful. Do not keep it if it's wild. Call a place that handles wild animals. And after handling any type of reptile you MUST wash your hands. Actually I think I said warm him up.
They have long spiky tails which they snap in the air when attacked or threatened and monitor their body temperature by either lying on a hot rock in the sun to warm up or staying in the shade to keep cool
Iguana is a genus of herbivorous lizards native to Central America. There are two species of iguana, Iguana delicatessima (Lesser Antillean Iguana), and Iguana iguana (Green Iguana). There are several similar genera that are commonly referred to as iguanas.
NOOOOO!!!!! That is a big no no the iguarna will kill or eat the gecko!!
whales keep warm by their blubber! good question
The fur on their bodies keep them warm.
The common name is the 'Green Iguana' probably the most common/famous iguana
They don't need to keep warm, they have a double coat so they stay warm.
iguana iguana