Banded geckos in the wild eat ants, Spiders, crickets, fruit flies, waxmoths, mealworms, beetles, earthworms, butterworms, superworms, caterpillars, butterflies and possibly baby mice and silkworms. In captivity, they eat mainly little crickets, mealworms, waxworms, silkworms, superworms, butterworms and pinky mice. Wild caught prey can be fed as long as they aren't infected with pesticides.
The Texas banded geckos are from the colenyx family of geckos. This genus of geckos are insectivores and rely on a variety of live feeders to survive.
Banded geckos of the Colenyx family are insectivores. These animals will eat live prey including: insects, arachnids, arthropods etc..
they can climb up walls and change colors
because if we touch them they will show there musle and eat our hand
Yes. They are two different species.
Yeea.
If you mean cohabitate; yes: during youth, but they should be separated at adulthood. If they are both male; the central American banded gecko is territorial when it becomes an adult. Also, once the leopard gecko grows to be an adult it will be much larger than the central American banded gecko. If you mean breed; no, reptile species should not be mixed.
They have the same name, but their color might be different. The spots and striped might be at their tail, the whole body, or the head. Their skin colors can be yellow, pinkish-orange, and that's all i know. :D
it depends if its hungry
Geckos are reptiles, and all reptiles are ectothermic.
They are native to south western USA and northern Mexico.
no crested geckos are solitary animal's, and will kill and might eat the other animal.
Day geckos are omnivores relying on insects and fruits for a healthy and stable diet. They do not however eat grass.
Monito gecko's eat insects and spiders
Their teeth are tough and strong!