This is off topic But there is a guy in Australia that has bred albino Bearded
Dragons I have the web site if anyone wants it.   Burke

Jon & Stacy Boone wrote:

> This species has been bred consistently in captivity for the past 6 years
> or so by myself and also with a few other keepers in the US and Europe.
> The eggs normally do not take 150 days to hatch.  They normally hatch in
> 70-90 days.  There is some evidence that hatchlings
> may be TDSD.  They always prefer to lay their eggs in dry substrates at a
> depth of about 2-4 inches.  Under ideal conditions they will
> produce 6-8 clutches of eggs per year.  The young are surprising large and
> grow rapidly under warm conditions.  They tend to breed during
> our winter, since they originate from the southern hemisphere.
>
> Jon
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent:   Sunday, March 31, 2002 7:36 PM
> To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:        Re: [Gecko] Phyllopezus pollicaris baby! (update)
>
> Renee,
>     Congratulations on the egg hatching. These (Phyllopezus pollicaris) are
> South American Geckos, superficially similar to Hemidactylus (but missing
> pads on one the thumbs), but possibly closer to Thecadactylus and another
> rare South American genus Bogertia. As far as I know this is the only
> record
> of them breeding in captivity and worth writing an article for the next
> Chit-chat or Gekko (hopefully with pictures).
>
> Ron Van Heest
>
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