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 > > ########################################################################### > THE GLOBAL GECKO ASSOCIATION LISTSERV > WebSite: www.gekkota.com Archive: [EMAIL PROTECTED]/ > The GGA takes no responsibility for the contents of these postings. > ###########################################################################
