Kinked?

Tommyy_7

New member
Haven't been here for a while so I am concerned about my little Tokay gecko at moment because I handled it recently and I noticed that my Tokay gecko have a kinked tail? Is it possible?

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cilatusguy

New member
Not an expert but it appears he may be getting MBD- medabodic bone disease
try giving him more calcium with feeding.

(listen to others that reply who have more experience with tokays though)

hope he is alright :)
 

Tommyy_7

New member
Not an expert but it appears he may be getting MBD- medabodic bone disease
try giving him more calcium with feeding.

(listen to others that reply who have more experience with tokays though)

hope he is alright :)

Well I have been feeding it with a calcium :?

Yeah I will.
 

Riverside Reptiles

Administrator (HMFIC)
A uv light won't do any real good with a nocturnal animal. Make sure that the calcium that you are dusting it's food with contains D3 but NO phosphorus. It needs to have the D3. Also make sure that you're gut loading the feeder insects well. Your food is only as good as the food it eats. Also, its possible that it just partially broke its tail. In which case, there's not much you can do. Or, it could be a genetic tail kink...but in that case he would have had it when you got him.
 

bawner00

New member
my tokay's tail is just like that, but it has been that way since I got her (more than a year ago), so I don't see a real problem with that, good luck
 

Riverside Reptiles

Administrator (HMFIC)
Well, if it's a genetic kink, you wouldn't want to breed it. You don't want to pass on traits like kinked tails. If it's a broken tail there's nothing you can do really...just let it be. But if it's MBD, you should address the issue as it could lead to serious problems down the road.
 

Tommyy_7

New member
A uv light won't do any real good with a nocturnal animal. Make sure that the calcium that you are dusting it's food with contains D3 but NO phosphorus. It needs to have the D3. Also make sure that you're gut loading the feeder insects well. Your food is only as good as the food it eats. Also, its possible that it just partially broke its tail. In which case, there's not much you can do. Or, it could be a genetic tail kink...but in that case he would have had it when you got him.

Well, if it's a genetic kink, you wouldn't want to breed it. You don't want to pass on traits like kinked tails. If it's a broken tail there's nothing you can do really...just let it be. But if it's MBD, you should address the issue as it could lead to serious problems down the road.

I hope it is not MBD because I don't want that! Yes that is true.

my tokay's tail is just like that, but it has been that way since I got her (more than a year ago), so I don't see a real problem with that, good luck

Well it could be genetic. Hope you haven't bred her with another male.
 

bawner00

New member
well this is mine, I haven't worried till i read this post, is this really a problem, she looks healthy to me, her behavior is "normal" to me too, when i bought her she was thin, but not skinny, I'm getting worried, can this be MBD?

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Riverside Reptiles

Administrator (HMFIC)
@ bawner...you'rs looks more like mbd or a genetic kink than a partial broken tail. It could be that it had mbd and has recovered now. Just make sure to give calcium with D3 and gut load your feeders well. You should be doing that regardless.
 

bawner00

New member
thanks ethan, I haven't checked the calcium I was feeding her, today I did t and it does contain D3, I'll pay more attention to her tail, to see if it gets better/worse.
 
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