Hartmut and others,

one footnote regarding the status of Lygo. kimhowelli - the new East 
African field guide regards this species as endangered, possibly critically 
endangered, as it is known
from only two localities.  One of which is a very small patch of coastal 
forest, the other a nearby suburban site.  Of course, collectors who spend 
more time in the forests might well
have located other plentiful localities.  But if the species finds 
protection in the future......

One might take good care, and better appreciation, of this species in the 
future.

Jon

-----Original Message-----
From:   Dipl.-Ing. Hartmut Lipp [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Monday, May 27, 2002 9:01 AM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        AW: [Gecko] striped cape gecko

Hi Listers,

> You might want to check out the following links to pictures on the GGA
Photo pages.
> http://www.gekkota.org/html/l__kimhowelli.html
> http://www.gekkota.org/html/l__luteopicturatus.html

Hmm, somehow the pictures I have submitted have turned from picturatus to
luteopicturatus
which is (as far as I know) not a valid name for my animals ... Greg, is
this some new
information that you took into account? If not, can you please correct it 
to
picturatus? Thanks!

> There are several people on the list who keep the above pictured geckos. 
I
have kept
> Lygodactylus capensis (Dwarf Cape Gecko) in the past, which are quite
similar in husbandry to
> diurnal Phelsuma Day Geckos.

I can only agree - I kept / keep my picturatus / kimhowelli together with
smaller Phelsuma, and
it work?s quite well (but don?t put them too moist, they like it a bit
drier).

> A L.kimhowelli is the one that I own right now. They are really quite
beautiful to watch. Will
> a striped cape gecko live well in a ten gallon tall terrarium?  I have 
UVB
florescent bulb and
> a UTH heater for him and provide plenty of tree branches and leaves for
him to hide in.

I cannot transfer your given size to metric scale, but everything else
sounds quite fine - they
like Bamboo a lot, eat fruit as well as insects and you can discern a male
by the black throat
and the hemipenis-bulges. Overall they are hardy, but if it?s a WC I?d go
for some fecals ... .

Good luck,

Hartmut Lipp (Germany)

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