Cicada Hollow
New member
I recently purchased a 1.3 pairing (Eeny, Meeny, Miney & Moe) and I've had them just over a week. I also purchased The Herpetoculture of Leopard Geckos by Vosjoli & Tremper, so am doing as much research as I can in order to provide the best care. Right now finances are a tad tight, so I had my 1.3 pairing temporally placed in a smaller 20 gallon tank. I plan on purchasing a 40 gal later this week, but needed to wait until payday.
They are in nice warm temps (hot hide average 86*-88*) and their breeding activity has started back up. I've seen ova in two of the females and one female laid two eggs for me. The past couple of days there has been a few dime sized blood spots here and there. Now I was told that this could be breeding related, so I wasn't overly concerned about the dime spots. I was unable to find any signs of injury to any of the leos.
However, last night I watched my Jungle Giant male (64.1 grams) brutally attack one of my females (50.0 grams.) Before I could intervene and rescue Meeny, Moe had grabbed her by the tail and CHOMP! She had been trying to get away from him and had positioned herself between the lay box and the tank side, so her tail was the only thing he could grab. But, now I'm afraid that Moe wasn't aggressively mating but trying to kill Meeny.
I've separated Moe from the females, especially since my smallest female is only 44 grams. I had purchased them to keep as a breeding colony, but if he's going to be that aggressive, I can't risk the females. Does anyone have any thoughts on whether a larger tank setup might alleviate some of the tension? I can have them in their new setup by Wednesday, which would be as soon as I had the funds.
I'm pretty bummed right now, almost ready to throw in the towel on the leos. *sigh* This was going to be a nice breeding group and I had high hopes for jungle giant cross babies. But, the leo project was just supposed to be something to do for fun and I'm not wanting to deal with separating the male from the females and work breeding schedules. Even if I did seperate, what would keep him from tearing another female up the next breeding cycle? Here is a picture of the suspect male:

They are in nice warm temps (hot hide average 86*-88*) and their breeding activity has started back up. I've seen ova in two of the females and one female laid two eggs for me. The past couple of days there has been a few dime sized blood spots here and there. Now I was told that this could be breeding related, so I wasn't overly concerned about the dime spots. I was unable to find any signs of injury to any of the leos.
However, last night I watched my Jungle Giant male (64.1 grams) brutally attack one of my females (50.0 grams.) Before I could intervene and rescue Meeny, Moe had grabbed her by the tail and CHOMP! She had been trying to get away from him and had positioned herself between the lay box and the tank side, so her tail was the only thing he could grab. But, now I'm afraid that Moe wasn't aggressively mating but trying to kill Meeny.
I've separated Moe from the females, especially since my smallest female is only 44 grams. I had purchased them to keep as a breeding colony, but if he's going to be that aggressive, I can't risk the females. Does anyone have any thoughts on whether a larger tank setup might alleviate some of the tension? I can have them in their new setup by Wednesday, which would be as soon as I had the funds.





I'm pretty bummed right now, almost ready to throw in the towel on the leos. *sigh* This was going to be a nice breeding group and I had high hopes for jungle giant cross babies. But, the leo project was just supposed to be something to do for fun and I'm not wanting to deal with separating the male from the females and work breeding schedules. Even if I did seperate, what would keep him from tearing another female up the next breeding cycle? Here is a picture of the suspect male:
