The iguana reserve is located on the island of Anegada. One of the rarest species of iguanas is the Anegadian iguana. In genetic and morphological terms, it is completely unique. Iguanas Anegad do not live in captivity and are found only on one remote island of the Virgin archipelago. About three hundred individuals live here, which makes them the rarest species of lizards on a global scale. Moreover, all the animals presented are, in a sense, pensioners. The age of some iguanas is approaching fifty, while young individuals are literally one. Today the island is recognized as a reserve and is carefully protected. A few tourist groups visit a kind of "iguana incubator" only accompanied by a guide who watches the guests. The project to restore the iguana Anegad population was launched in 1997, but at the moment it has only managed to stabilize the critical problem of the extinction of this species. It will take at least fifty years to restore the iguana population, at least in the British Virgin Islands.