Yahoo – AFP,
25 May 2015
Quito (AFP) - A volcano in the Galapagos islands erupted for the first time in more than 30 years Monday, sending streams of lava flowing down its slopes and potentially threatening the world's only colony of pink iguanas.
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| The eruption of the volcano Wolf on Isabela Island, Galapagos on May 25, 2015 (AFP Photo/Diego Paredes) |
Quito (AFP) - A volcano in the Galapagos islands erupted for the first time in more than 30 years Monday, sending streams of lava flowing down its slopes and potentially threatening the world's only colony of pink iguanas.
The
Galapagos National Park warned on Twitter that Isabela Island, where Wolf
volcano erupted at dawn, holds "the world's only population" of the
iguanas, Conolophus marthae, also known as the Galapagos rosy iguana.
Park
officials told AFP they were not immediately able to establish whether the iguanas
were at risk from the eruption.
A tourist
boat passing by the uninhabited island informed authorities the 1,707-meter
(5,600-foot) volcano was erupting.
Park
officials then flew over the area to assess the impact of the eruption.
Pictures
released by the park show fiery streams of lava trickling down the side of the
volcano as a puff of smoke rises into the air and tongues of fire dart from the
crater.
Wolf
volcano had last erupted in 1982.
Isabela
Island is the largest in the Galapagos, the Ecuadoran archipelago made famous
by Charles Darwin's studies of its breathtaking biodiversity, which was crucial
in his development of the theory of evolution by natural selection.
The island
chain, which sits about 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) off the coast of Ecuador,
is one of the most volcanically active regions in the world.
Isabela
island, which strides the equator, also has four other volcanoes: Darwin,
Alcedo, Cerro Azul and Sierra Negra.

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