I think you are getting little ahead of the game here. Wait for a diagnosis and prognosis, then work with the vet to implement a treatment plan. Geckos come with parasites and salmonella, that is the way mother nature built them. Normally they live with these conditions just fine, well into their teens and 20s if everything is optimal for them. Once a stressor occurs, for example: moving, geckos not getting along with each other, some other medical condition; then, the parasites and other stuff like salmonella that lives in geckos naturally will start to get the upper hand and start impacting the gecko's health. The vet will be looking at the parasite load to see how many are present and if that is something that needs to be treated. Crypto, as many have pointed out here in this discussion, would be the one parasite leopard geckos have a hard time living with. All other common gecko parasites like pinworms are treatable if the gecko is in good body condition.

It is always a good idea to keep a clean terrarium, that helps keep parasites to keep from becoming a problem. Your attention to the food bins is good too, keep them clean also. As long as we are broaching that subject, oatmeal is not great as a food for the mealworms. Stick with a proven gutload like Repashy Insect Gutload for that function. I use leafy greens and carrots for moisture, the gel cubes and such are a waste of $ IMHO.

Julie B.


argente wrote:

Hello all,

Thinking about my sick geckos and looking forward, if this is a parasite issue can anyone give me some clues as to where it might have come from? I've been wracking my brain for changes in their routine lately..

These geckos have all been together for several years and are my only animals. The only contact they have with each other is that the girls who are not housed together are temporarily together when I'm cleaning the tanks. Peanut is never in with the girls.

They eat crickets (from petco) and mealworms (raised by me and occasionally supplemented with some from petco but that hasn't happened in months). Their water dishes are filled with bottled spring water. I've been on the same bottles of vitamins & calcium supplement for a while now. The mealworms are in a plastic tub filled with a mixture of oatmeal, fish food, cricket food, and vegetables for moisture (carrots and potatoes). I did add new oatmeal to the worm bin recently. I get crickets in small batches as treats so they don't stick around long.

I don't wash my hands between animals usually but I'm pretty good about washing before/after. Aside from while their tanks are being cleaned, Peanut doesn't get handled much since he bit me in January; I take the girls out probably a few times a month. They don't ever run free in the house.

I haven't gotten anything new for their cages in a long time. There are no plants in the tanks, just logs, "rock" hides, wood hides, and plastic moist hides with paper towels to hold moisture. They are all on reptile carpet with paper towels over that are changed at least once a week. The girls have a ceramic food dish in addition to their calcium dish; peanut just has the calcium because he won't eat from a dish.

I could probably clean their tank furniture more often and will step up my schedule for that, but their water dishes are washed with every refill. I clean the tanks with a bleach solution & rinse; I guess I should start alternating that with ammonia soaks? The carpets go through a hot washer cycle once in a while.

Any thoughts/suggestions welcome.

-Jessica


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