Most of the Colenyxx species are native to the deserts of Texas ranging through to Mexico. These are also known as "banded Geckos" there are over 40 different species of banded geckos world wide.
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.
it would be commensalism because the geko needs the desert to live and the desert stays the same!
Supposedly the Texas banded gecko is around these parts, but mainly we see the house gecko, which is originally from Asia. When we moved into our house on the outskirts of town we were surprised at how little insects there were coming into the house. A late night inspection of our outside walls showed why...Gecko City!
because if we touch them they will show there musle and eat our hand
Javelina, roadrunner, grey-banded snake, lizard and scorpion.
Geckos are reptiles, and all reptiles are ectothermic.
Usually they are the Hiffer Jumping Gecko. Scientific Name: Hydraclis Typhera
i believe it is a Western Banded Gecko
There is no such thing as the Texas Rattlesnake. However, their are a number of rattlesnake species that live in the Chihuahuan Desert: Western Diamondback Prairie Mojave Blacktail Mottled Rock Banded Rock Massasauga