The conservation status of the species in this family varies greatly. Several species, for example
Leiocephalus carinatus, are common and widespread. Others are rare and highly threatened, especially those restricted to a single small island or a single location on a larger island, like the
critically endangered Leiocephalus (barahonensis) altavelensis from
Alto Velo Island and critically endangered
Leiocephalus onaneyi from
Guantánamo Province in
Cuba. Several species of
Leiocephalus are already
extinct, including all of the Jamaican, Puerto Rican and Lesser Antillean members of the genus. Some of these are only known from fossil or
subfossil remains and became extinct in the
Pleistocene or
pre-Columbian era, but others such as two Lesser Antillean species and one from
Navassa survived until comparatively recently, during the 19th century.
Leiocephalus is the only known
squamate genus to be entirely wiped out from the Lesser Antilles following European colonization; other reptilian genera that have also seen significant extirpations in the Lesser Antilles, such as
Boa or
Diploglossus, still retain
relict populations on at least some islands, such as
Dominica and
Montserrat. This mass disappearance of
Leiocephalus from the Lesser Antilles may be due to their inhabiting
dry forests in
littoral areas that were heavily exploited and
deforested by early colonists. Few confirmed
Leiocephalus fossil remains from after the
early Holocene are known from the Lesser Antilles, which has raised doubts about their being only recently extirpated from this area; however,
Leiocephalus fossil bones are small and closely resemble those of other lizard species, which may explain the lack of detection of
Leiocephalus fossil bones from these areas aside from by the most highly trained palaeo-herpetologists. == Newly discovered species ==