When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: how often to feed crested geckos

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Crested gecko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crested_gecko

    The crested gecko is now one of the most widely-kept and bred species of gecko in the world, second only to the common leopard gecko. [11] The crested gecko can be very long-lived. While it has not been kept in captivity long enough for a definitive life span to be determined, it has been kept for 15–20 years or more. [17] [7]

  3. Phelsuma sundbergi ladiguensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phelsuma_sundbergi_ladiguensis

    In captivity, these animals can be fed with crickets, wax moth larvae, fruit flies, mealworms and houseflies. A commercial powered Crested Gecko diet (made by Repashy and mixed with water), supplemented with occasional insects, works well and supports breeding. This diet works well for most fruit/nectar-eating geckos.

  4. List of geckos of New Zealand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_geckos_of_New_Zealand

    Two species of the New Caledonian rough-snouted giant geckos are the only other viviparous geckos in the world. Like most gecko species, New Zealand’s geckos are omnivorous, consuming a diet that is primarily insectivorous in nature, hunting numerous flies, arachnids, lepidoptorans and gryllids (crickets).

  5. Gecko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gecko

    These, for example the house gecko, become part of the indoor menagerie and are often welcomed, as they feed on insect pests; including moths and mosquitoes. Like most lizards, geckos can lose their tails in defence, a process called autotomy; the predator may attack the wriggling tail, allowing the gecko to escape. [8]

  6. Diplodactylidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplodactylidae

    The Diplodactylidae are a family in the suborder Gekkota (geckos), with over 150 species in 25 genera. [2] These geckos occur in Australia, New Zealand, and New Caledonia. [3] [4] Diplodactylids are the most ecologically diverse and widespread family of geckos in both Australia and New Caledonia, and are the only family of geckos found in New Zealand.

  7. Rhacodactylus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhacodactylus

    Lesser rough-snouted giant gecko, Rhacodactylus trachycephalus; Willi's giant gecko, Rhacodactylus willihenkeli [2] A revision of the giant geckos of New Caldonia found weak support for inclusion of some taxa allied to this genus, and these have been assigned to new combinations: [3] Correlophus ciliatus, crested gecko; formerly R. ciliatus

  8. Phelsuma grandis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phelsuma_grandis

    Its generic name is a Latinized version of the last name of Dutch physician Murk van Phelsum. [2] Its specific name grandis is Latin for "great".. The species Phelsuma grandis described by Gray 1870 was elevated from subspecies status (P. madagascariensis grandis) by Raxworthy et al. in 2007, [3] after environmental niche modeling revealed significant and reliable differences between it and ...

  9. Gecko feet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gecko_feet

    There are over 1,000 different species of geckos. [1] They can be a variety of colors. Geckos are omnivorous, feeding on a variety of foods, including insects and worms. [2] Most gecko species, including the crested gecko (Correlophus ciliatus), [3] can climb walls and other surfaces.