Florida Temperatures Drop, Resulting in 'Falling Iguana' Alert
Florida Temperatures Drop, Resulting in 'Falling Iguana' Alert

Florida Temperatures Drop, , Resulting in 'Falling Iguana' Alert.

NBC News reports the National Weather Service in Miami-South Florida had an odd warning for its residents on Jan.

30.

Iguanas are falling from the trees, but don't be alarmed.

Officials say many iguanas in South Florida had become immobilized due to unseasonably cold temperatures, resulting in many falling from their perch as they slept on tree branches.

Iguanas are cold-blooded.

They slow down or become immobile when temps drop into the 40s (4-9 Celsius).

, National Weather Service, via Twitter.

They may fall from trees, but they are not dead.

, National Weather Service, via Twitter.

As temperatures plummeted to lows of 25 degrees Fahrenheit, residents reported yards "littered with frozen iguanas.”.

...Because it gets so cold, they lose that ability to hang on and then they do fall out of trees a lot.

, Zoologist Stacey Cohen, reptile expert at Palm Beach Zoo, via NBC News.

Though most of the iguana population of South Florida will survive this cold spell, experts say for them, low temperatures are often a death sentence.

Cold is a very, very life-threatening thing for them because they are from parts of Central and South America close to the equator where it always stays very warm.

, Zoologist Stacey Cohen, reptile expert at Palm Beach Zoo, via NBC News.

Green iguanas are not native to South Florida.

They are considered an invasive species.

According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, iguanas were introduced to the region by accident, as stowaways on cargo ships