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Yes pleaseThere is a forum I am apart of made to help people with every species of gecko. Do you want the address? I can pm you?
Edit: he's definitely looking more what I would expect from a golden gecko. Keep going.
The little girl gave me 2 things of baby food when she gave him to me she said he liked fruit.If you want to help perk him up, try mixing some pureed pears or really ripe raspberries with like a tablespoon of organic honey. They love honey and it helps fight diseases and gives them a boost of energy because of the natural sugar content. Its my go to food for my frugivorious reptiles when they have gotten sick and need a little pep to just keep going. However don't feed too much honey on a regular basis, it is fattening.
Ok thanks for the help in trying to identify himI would personally soak up evey bit of knowledge andee offers as he knows far more than I do I have a tokay and that's as close to a gecko as I have owned to this one u have. I'm sad to say he is for sure right it's an unhealthy golden gecko I did not kno they could look this Color but with a little research I am 100% behind him
K. I'll get some tomorrow and see if I can get him perked up.Baby food that is purely fruit based can be used instead of the pears and raspberries, just add the tablespoon of organic honey, I would mix it really well.
What about the human heating pad I am using as a temporary solution..Will that hurt him? It is on lowNow that I looked up golden geckos I am almost positive that is what he is, he has the body type and very muted colors of an unhappy golden gecko. They do best with live vivariums but until then I would get him a low wattage ceramic heat emitter because unlike most nocturnal geckos (which is what I am used to dealing with) need a normal heat range of 75 to 70. A 60 watt blue night bulb or ceramic heat emitter should be fine. I would use a uvb light to signify day time. He should be able to come back as long as he has no serious mbd damage or damage to his kidneys. He needs to misted at least twice a day. They usually don't drink from bowls unless desperate and need higher humidity like chameleons.
Y'all have got me on all of this lolYeah I have had a couple baby crested I took care of for a friend when they were just hatched... God so cute. Lol anyway, I have also had a giant day gecko or a phelsuma Grandis, which is in the classification of the golden gecko. The golden gecko in my opinion is like a house gecko but also similair to a day gecko. Though they are technically under the day gecko genus I think. I have had up to seven leopard geckos and regularly rehabilitate them. I have also researched tons of different day geckos, leachie, and gargoyles. But I honestly know nothing about toKays. So you got me there replife lol
You'll also eventually want to order some repashy day gecko food. Technically he can live off this even if you can't spice it up with bugs or honey/fruit. Though I always recommend a varied diet. The bulk of his food should be the repashy, because it will be perfectly made for his system to thrive off of, however a varied diet is always amazing for reptiles.
I honestly think if you did something open air like that, you'd need to attach a plastic shower curtain on three of the sides. Day geckos and such and recommended to be kept in tanks or combo screen and glass. However there is nothing wrong with open air enclosures as long as you maintain high humidity with them. They need less mistings than chameleons but have generally higher humidity requirements, though still need to dry out. It is recommended that their regular humidity for a general basis on day geckos stays at 65 to 70 percent and no lower, spiking sometimes to 80. This means very short mistings, just enough to get things wet. So that the moisture can maintain humidity and they can drink, but it doesn't stay stagnant. That's why it's usually recommended for them to go in live planted enclosures. However with rehabilitation cases, I never do that. Just so that the gecko is easy to observe and the droppings are easy to find. He should be fine in a ten gallon enclosure at least until he is healthier. Then a single individual should be fine in a 20-25 gallon enclosure.I have a question andee I don't know if you seen the open air mesh cage I posted a pic of but do u think that would be any better than wat she currently has?