Conservationists in Ibiza are warning the island’s native shiny blue and inexperienced lizards are coming ever nearer to extinction as a result of mounting threats of invasive snakes and vacationers’ litter.
The Ibiza wall lizard is endemic to Ibiza and neighbouring Formentera and is significant to the ecosystem of the islands, specialists say, for pollinating vegetation and controlling pests.
Because the 2000s, the small, vibrant reptiles, that are innocent to people, have grow to be endangered as a result of proliferation of invasive snakes that first arrived in imported timber.
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Conservationists say Ibiza lizards are endangered. Pic: Dean Gallagher
Conservation basis IbizaPreservation says snakes at the moment are current on as much as 90% of the island, whereas the lizard inhabitants has decreased massively, believed to have disappeared from about 70%.
However there may be additionally one other subject affecting the species – litter left primarily by vacationers at magnificence spots.
Dean Gallagher, a snake catcher on the island, says he’s continuously discovering the our bodies of useless lizards caught inside discarded bottles and cans at Es Savinar, a southerly viewpoint the place individuals typically collect for sundown.

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Dean Gallagher has lived in Ibiza for greater than 20 years
Tourism accounts for about 84% of Ibiza’s financial system and is significant for the island, with vacationer spending reaching 4.3bn euros in 2024, in line with the Balearic Institute of Statistics (IBESTAT) – a rise of 62% since 2016. The variety of vacationers reached a report excessive of greater than 3.7m for Ibiza and neighbouring Formentera in 2023 – a rise of just about 25% since 2016.
The land Dean takes care of at Es Savinar is non-public, he says, however individuals ignore indicators and fences which had been changed in the beginning of the summer time.
“We do rubbish collections probably once or twice a week,” he says. “We clear the whole area of bottles and cans then the next time, we go back and there’s even more.
“Bottles could cause bush fires. The forests are actually dry in the mean time, only one spark can set this place alight. And [litter] can be killing our lizards. They’re marvellous, lovely creatures, they don’t seem to be aggressive and so they hold the bugs away. The ecological worth is actually necessary.”

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Indicators have been put up across the non-public land. Pic: Dean Gallagher
Dean lives close to Santa Eulalia, the place he says numbers are scarce. “Lots of parts of the north of the island now, they’ve completely diminished and it’s very sad,” he provides.
“And the very southwest corner of the island where this viewpoint is, this is the last place where they are in stable numbers. But the excessive rubbish, tourism, snakes, are gonna wipe them out completely.”

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Gallagher says he’s continuously discovering the reptiles trapped in glass bottles and cans
Visible surveys of areas of Ses Salines Pure Park by environmental affiliation GEN-GOB have discovered the inhabitants there has decreased by between 70% and 90% since 2023.
GEN-GOB, Buddies Of The Earth Ibiza and IbizaPreservation are amongst a number of organisations which were working to avoid wasting the species lately.
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Jordi Serapio, coordinator of Protegim Ses Sargantanes, IbizaPreservation’s lizard safety venture, says deserted bottles and cans are “deadly traps” for the animals.
And snake numbers proceed to develop and increase towards territories the place lizards nonetheless stay, he provides. The most typical snake on the island – and the most important hazard to lizards – is the horseshoe whip snake, however different varieties have been noticed.
“It has followed a northeast to southwest expansion,” he says. “The highest snake densities are observed in what they have called the ‘invasion front’ – this is known precisely thanks to trapping.
“In distinction, in areas the place lizards have already grow to be extinct, there seems to be a a lot decrease density of snakes.”
So the extra meals accessible for the snakes, the upper the numbers.
“This is something common in most biological invasions, which end up regulating themselves naturally,” Jordi says. “The unknown in this case is whether some lizard populations will manage to survive and adapt. Although everything seems to indicate that they won’t.”
He additionally highlights one other downside – predation by each feral and home cats – which he says is a rising risk.
“In the current context of the species’ extinction, any additional pressure worsens the situation.”

