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Fauna · Española Island, Galápagos, Ecuador

Galápagos Marine Iguana Aggregation — Española

The marine iguanas of Española Island in the Galápagos are the most vivid and largest of the archipelago's six marine iguana subspecies, with the males developing extraordinary red-and-green breeding coloration from November through March that has earned them the nickname 'Christmas iguanas' and creates aggregations on the island's lava shores of such chromatic intensity they appear almost artificially painted. Española's marine iguanas bask in dense aggregations of hundreds of animals on the dark lava, the males' red-and-green scales glowing against the black rock in a colour combination that creates one of the Galápagos's most visually striking wildlife compositions. The island is also the sole breeding site of the waved albatross — the only tropical albatross species — whose colony of 25,000 pairs occupies the island's plateau from April through December, the birds performing elaborate dancing courtship rituals of sky-pointing, bill-clapping, and synchronised walking in full view of visitors on the designated path. The combination of the colourful marine iguanas, the waved albatross colony, Nazca boobies nesting on the cliffs, and the sea lion colony on the beach creates an Española wildlife circuit of five globally significant species on a single half-day island visit. The Galápagos's absence of predator fear in all species creates the intimate encounter quality that makes every island visit an experience of profound ecological uniqueness.

When
Jan — Dec, peak Nov — Mar
Best viewing
A half-day circuit on a predator-naive island where red-and-green marine iguanas bask in dense lava-shore aggregations alongside waved albatross courtship dances, Nazca booby nesting cliffs, and sea lions — all at close range.
Category
Fauna
Status
In season

About this spectacle

Standing on Española Island's black lava shores, visitors find themselves surrounded by hundreds of marine iguanas in extraordinary red-and-green breeding colours — the most vivid of all Galápagos subspecies. Males glow against the dark rock in a chromatic spectacle so intense it appears almost painted. The iguanas bask in dense, unhurried aggregations, indifferent to human presence within metres. Overhead and across the plateau, 25,000 pairs of waved albatross perform elaborate courtship dances — sky-pointing, bill-clapping, synchronised walking — in full view along the designated trail. Nazca boobies nest on the cliffs, and a sea lion colony occupies the beach. The Galápagos's famous absence of predator fear means every animal encounter is intimate and unhurried. Morning light catches the iguanas' scarlet-and-emerald scales against the black rock, creating extraordinary photographic compositions. The full circuit of the island's wildlife zones — iguana lava fields, albatross plateau, booby cliffs, sea lion beach — delivers five globally significant species in a single half-day visit, each encounter at arm's length.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak Nov — Mar

Getting there

Nearest airport: GPS. Nearest city: Puerto Baquerizo Moreno.

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