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10-18-2006, 04:20 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Posts: 625
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Lygodactylus kimhowelli
Anyone else keeping these? One thing I like about keeping geckos is you can get beautiful species for cheap! I have a pair of these guys, and their alot of fun. I feed them house flies, mealworms and banana. They are currently in a 5 gallon critter keeper, with live plants and peat moss substrate.
I keep them at 80 F, and 60 % Humidity.
Sound good? How do you guys keep yours? Got any pics of your geckos and enclosures?
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10-18-2006, 04:56 PM
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Newbie
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Netherlands (Ede)
Posts: 93
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I keep them the same way as my Phelsuma's. In this topic you see pics of how I keep them: http://geckosunlimited.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=8245 (the left two enclosures in the upper row contain pairs of L. kimhowelli)
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Best Regards,
Jeroen van Leeuwen
G. vittatus, G. albogularis fuscus, G. ocellatus, G. caudiscutatus, S. roosevelti, S. elegans, L. williamsi, P. robertmertensi, P. klemmeri, L. lugubris, H. typus, G. mutilata
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10-18-2006, 05:16 PM
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Junior member
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 323
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I got mine pretty cheap as well along with a pair of mourning geckos. They all share a decent sized screen enclosure with a large leafy plant. Temps in the high 70's and twice a day misting and a uv lamp. The lygo's are I believe a 2.1 ratio. I saw her gravid once but as of yet have seen no offspring. They get along great with the mournings, but I'd like to get 3-5 more females as I have mucho room to spare. Hopefully I along with some of you other lygo newbies can have some success breeding them. Does anyone know where they lay their eggs. The mournings are attached up high, but I saw a pair at the base of the leaf of the plant and wonder if they belong to the lygos?
thanks,
Mark
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Mark
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10-19-2006, 04:54 AM
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Newbie
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Netherlands (Ede)
Posts: 93
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The eggs are mostly layed in the armpits of plants or inside bamboo pipes. Most of the time they produce two eggs at a time, but sometimes only one (here mostly at the end of the breeding season).
__________________
Best Regards,
Jeroen van Leeuwen
G. vittatus, G. albogularis fuscus, G. ocellatus, G. caudiscutatus, S. roosevelti, S. elegans, L. williamsi, P. robertmertensi, P. klemmeri, L. lugubris, H. typus, G. mutilata
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10-19-2006, 10:49 AM
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Junior member
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 323
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Thanks so much, that's great news as the eggs I was curious about are in the armpits of the plant, which I thought was odd as the mournings always lay theirs at the upper corners of the tank. Do you think I should leave them in the plant (I'm worried cause mournings are voracious little beasts and may chow on them upon hatching) or should I remove them to incubate and if so what humidity and heat do you recommend?
thanks,
mark
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Mark
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10-19-2006, 06:56 PM
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Newbie
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Netherlands (Ede)
Posts: 93
Classified Rating: 0% (0)
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I always take the eggs out and place them in an incubator, because not only mourning geckos, but also the adult kimhowelli's prefer hatchlings as food source...
I incubate them at 27 degrees Celcius and a humidity of about 60%. At that temperature, it will take around 80-90 days till hatching. I also bred them at higher temperatures, but then you get mostly males..
__________________
Best Regards,
Jeroen van Leeuwen
G. vittatus, G. albogularis fuscus, G. ocellatus, G. caudiscutatus, S. roosevelti, S. elegans, L. williamsi, P. robertmertensi, P. klemmeri, L. lugubris, H. typus, G. mutilata
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