This is either Cyrtodactylus pulchellus or Cyrtodactylus intermedius. To be sure I'd need better pictures to key them. But the difference between C. pulchellus and C. intermedius is poorly defined, and the distribution overlap, so I find many specimens hard to determine.
Anyway, the two species should be kept similarly, although C. intermedius is, according to litterature, found in high elevations (--> lower temps.), and C. pulchellus is a lowland species. Keep em' @ 77-78F, and mist them regularly. That's how I keep (what I think is C. intermedius) mine. I keep mine individually in larger, what you yankees would call, "shoe boxes". My animals refuse to breed, unless I simulate a rain-period for them in the winter. Hope some of this has helped, //Assar >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: [Gecko] need help with picture >Date: Sun, 18 Nov 2001 10:10:39 EST > >I need to know what species of gecko this is, any info would be a great >help. > >Thanks >Matthew bendig >[EMAIL PROTECTED] > ><< Pb170006.jpg >> _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ########################################################################### THE GLOBAL GECKO ASSOCIATION LISTSERV WebSite: www.gekkota.com Archive: [EMAIL PROTECTED]/ The GGA takes no responsibility for the contents of these postings. ###########################################################################
