Fermin drives to dozens of properties on the island almost every Thursday, spending six to eight hours each day trapping from three to 30 iguanas. They are later euthanized because they cannot be relocated and released in other locations in Florida. He said nearly 450 properties are registered in the city's iguana removal program and that he can't get to all of them on a single day. In fiscal 2020, the city spent a little more than $23,000 on the program, trapping 741 green iguanas of all sizes, and in fiscal 2019 it spent $20,000, trapping 634, according to Tonia Selmeski, the city's environmental planner. For fiscal 2021, the city allocated $20,000 to the iguana removal program, trapping 308 iguanas from Oct. 1, 2020, to April 8, according to data provided by the city. No trapping activities were conducted in three of those weeks.