Do you know were this animal came from? If you know it came from China instead of Indonesia, it has all the right markings for a "Rock Tokay" which is most likely a different sub-species that dwells in between rock ledges in a small province in China. They are able to flatten out unlike Gekko, gecko.
:biggrin:Cool. And very nice.
Since the genetics are anyone's guess, we call these fancy or aberrant Tokay.
If the background color is dark gray, than one day you may find it 'fire-up' to a light blue with orange dots. This has been the case with my Tokay from Vietnam.
If the background color is green, then it could be het for patternless green, but I do not have any from Vietnam to prove this out. This is a hunch based on what I've seen in Indonesian Tokay.
Enjoy!:biggrin:
C´mon guys...thats not at all a tokay, its a dark Gekko smithii. Not too unusual.
I'd also love to hear of a good source for some smithii. Love to get one of those giants.
oke:Yeah, so you get my 'chastising' you about them being fairly common.
oke:
I have a male and I'd love to build a breeding group, even a female or two would be a good start. The only ones seem to be in Europe and I haven't put the effort in to funding and securing the purchase.
Jon Boone has had a male now and again but I've not bought a second one without a female to go with it.
Same story for the 'Rock Tokay'. We'll see.:roll:
Yeah, I know. I'm hoping not to have to do the Trans-Atlantic shuffle through Jon/Hamm, or whomever. But it just may come down to that.:scratchhead:Well, I breed them, but I am located in Germany
Well your girl is showing all the typical color markings of a normal Tokay. This is obvious in the side detail. She is showing a dark, or stressed look but this might change soon enough.
Also, if this is a fresh wild caught animal, wait until it sheds a couple of times. I get them in looking quite dark & dull but they brighten up after a couple of sheds.