Toronto Star

Backyard harvesters sell green iguana meat online

Floridians see chance to capitalize on cold snap with ‘chicken of the trees’

- CARLOS FRIAS

MIAMI— Mango season may be months away, but if you live in South Florida, your trees may have recently been ripe for the picking — of iguanas.

Iguana meat, dubbed “chicken of the trees,” started showing up on Facebook Marketplac­e overnight last week, as the temperatur­e dipped into the 40s.

The green iguanas are an invasive species, stunned lifeless by South Florida’s occasional cold snaps, and they die if the chilly weather holds. The National Weather Service even tweeted to watch out for falling iguanas.

That apparently makes them easy pickings for backyard harvesters.

Several ads for skinned and butchered iguanas, looking like Peking not-duck, were posted in Miami, Doral and Homestead. Some of the ads, however, were posted days ago and show iguana meat that has clearly been frozen (though not by South Florida’s climate).

At least one ad showed what looked like freshly prepped garrobo — a name often used as interchang­eable for iguana in parts of Latin America. (The animals may be slightly different species, but both are found as invasive in South Florida.) But can you actually eat them? You absolutely can — as long as the food comes from a reputable processor, according to the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultur­al Sciences. They are commonly hunted in Central and South America and parts of the Caribbean and are an “economical source of protein,” according to the organizati­on’s post.

“There is a reason why these invasive iguanas are hunted in their native countries as food to the point where they are considered endangered species,” Frank Mazzotti, professor of wildlife ecology at the UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center in Davie, Fla. “They are excellent to taste, and they are a great source of food.”

The iguanas should be treated like chicken from preparatio­n to safety handling, since they can carry salmonella, Brenda Marty-Jimenez, a UF/IFAS agent, wrote on the organizati­on’s blog in August of 2018.

“Some say they look like alligators or mini-dinosaurs, and others say they look good for dinner!” she wrote.

Because of the salmonella risk, IFAS warns not to try to make iguana ceviche. Instead, the meat should be cooked to at least 165 F.

IFAS even provided several recipes, including one for iguana tacos for newbies.

 ?? JOE CAVARETTA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Green iguanas are stunned lifeless by cold snaps and could die if chilly weather holds.
JOE CAVARETTA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Green iguanas are stunned lifeless by cold snaps and could die if chilly weather holds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada