Hi Pauline,
It does sound like possibly egg bound. My females havnt really dug much
either. Atleast not every time. I have read form another post as well that
sometimes if they tail gets really fat then they my not eat for a while. I
dont realy know if I beleive that, but thats what someone said a breeder
told him (the source isn't to take as assumed accurate). Anyways, 2 weeks
should have laid. But as you already know, I ran into problems as well.
Anyways just to let you know, I was never able to get my female in. She
still eats and seems healthy as can be. I think it's possible they were
infertile eggs. I have read somewhere that infertile eggs can asorbe safely.
Im not sure how accurate that source was but beleive I read it a couple
times. So far she seems ok. I also read too, that breeding can fertilize
these eggs and allow her to lay. Has anyone ever heard this before? Or have
experience? Anyways, I whould worry since its a female and she bred 2 months
ago. The eating could be from other reason's like the medison. It's possible
she is infertil. But if you are just seeing eggs now, its problably becouse
shes living off her fat and not producing enough for viable eggs.
Thanks for all your help in the past.
Best of luck,
Mario
http://www.geckonetwork.com/geckos/

----- Original Message -----
From: "Pauline Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2002 6:37 AM
Subject: [Gecko] Leopard Gecko Not Eating


> Hi all,
>
> I've been a member of the GGA for a while, but I'm new to this list.  I'm
hoping that someone can give me a bit of advice, or some reassurance about
my leopard gecko.  I'll apologize now for the length of this message, but I
just want to give all the info that I think is relevant- I wont go into her
actual set-up conditions or supplementation as I feel confident with all of
that, I have 13 leopard geckos in all, and they are all thriving- with her
as the present exception (I am of course happy to give set-up details if
anyone thinks it could be relevant).
>
> I have a female leopard gecko who is two years old now.  She seems to have
lost interest in food (well, livefood at least), and I'm not sure what the
cause is.
>
> Up to January 2002 she seemed in good health.  I have had her from a baby
and she has always eaten well, and grew well (big for a female leo).  She is
9.5 inches (snout to tail tip) and  weighed 74g in June 2001- that was when
she was fully grown at about 1 year old.  She then bulked out a bit reaching
85g at the end of January 2002.  At the end of January I did a routine fecal
check on all of my leos and found that they had a small load of pinworms (I
got a vet to confirm my id of pinworms on the slide, he prescribed panacur,
I gave two doses and then found that the next fecals were clean, and have
been clean since).
>
> My leo seemed to stop eating around the time that I wormed them (my other
leos did too, but started eating normally again a few days later).  I didnt
worry too much that I hadnt seen her eating though because as she'd gotten
older her eating slowed down anyway, and she seemed to rarely eat while
maintaining her weight.
>
> I'd introduced her to a male last year, when she was 1, but she didnt seem
interested in mating (she seemed quite aggressive towards the male, so I
took her straight back out again).  I tried her again this year (at the
beginning of Feb, about 1 week after the clean fecal) and this time she
mated.  That was 9 Feb (I keep males and females separate so I know the
exact dates), for quite some time after that I wasnt sure whether she was
gravid or not (I usually find it quite easy to see the eggs, but this female
has a particularly white stomach, which I find difficult to see through- or
maybe there were just never eggs to see?)- anyway, I think that she maybe
wasnt gravid.  Now, just over the last few days (which is approximately 2
months after she mated) I'm 99% sure I can see eggs.
>
> Having said that she is not interested in food, for the last two weeks
(maybe 4 or 5 out of 7 days) I have been feeding her babyfood (fruit) with
Jumpstart and calcium (and sometimes vitamins) mixed in.  She seems very
happy to eat that- licks it off my finger.  Today she weighs 75g (she's been
stable at that weight for around 3 weeks now)- thats around 10g less than
she did at the end of January.  Its not like she is wasting away, she still
seems quite chunky, I'm just concerned at the weight loss, and the apparent
lack of appetite.
>
> In brief, she seems to have stopped eating (not even interested in
waxworms, but will take babyfood) and has lost weight (quite noticable in
her tail) around the time I wormed her, or around the time that she mated-
could one of these be the connection?.  I have not noticed any other
differences in her behaviour, she is still shedding and behaving normally.
>
> So, my questions (and thoughts) are:
> - What triggered the lack of appetite? could it have had anything to do
with the Panacur or the mating? (I'm wondering if the panacur could have
disturbed her natural flora, if it did, how would I restore this?- probably
not with babyfood!, also I'm guessing that if she is actually carrying eggs
that her appetite would be suppressed as her stomach may be squeezed by the
eggs).
>
> -I know they can store sperm (mating once to produce an entire seasons
fertile eggs), but does that mean that she could mate at the start of the
season and then hold the sperm until she decides to make eggs (none of my
others seem to have done this).
>
> -If she is actually carrying eggs, why might she have decided not to lay
them (I dont believe her to be egg bound as I havent seen her digging, or
straining- please correct me if there are other signs to look out for).
>
> -should I continue to feed her babyfood/jumpstart? (I dont want to stop
incase she loses too much weight, but I'm concerned that if I continue
she'll never feel hungry enough to eat on her own, and will get used to
being "spoiled")
>
> (I have actually spoken to a vet who has said that this type of wasting is
quite common in leopard geckos and to keep feeding the jumpstart with
supplements and she'll hopefully come round).
>
> I'd be grateful for any advice/ideas,
> Thanks,
> Pauline
>
>
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