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<!-- google_ad_section_start -->Frindged Leaftail Gecko (Uroplatus henkeli)<!-- google_ad_section_end -->
Frindged Leaftail Gecko (Uroplatus henkeli)
Published by natas
10-08-2006
Frindged Leaftail Gecko (Uroplatus henkeli)




Pics provided courtesy of Silas


Written by: Silas


INTRODUCTION


One of the most bizarre creatures of the Madagascar forest, the Uroplatus henkeli is one of the most hardiest of its genus.
This animal reaches over all lengths of 11 inches and can be considered as the chameleons of geckos.
It is able to change its colors and patterns to blend in with the barks and leaves it is around.
It has a large, flat tail shaped like a leaf, hence the name "Leaf Tail Gecko".
Multiple males and females can be housed together in one aquarium. The enclosure should be tall and filled with things like branches and limbs for the gecko to climb on.
The Uroplatus is one of my personal favorite "display" geckos out of them all!
These Creatures are some of the wildest looking animals on the face of the earth. They come from the African country, Madagascar, and primarily spend all their lives in and on trees. These Geckos have to be the masters of camouflage.
They resemble leaves of bark of trees and can change colors like Chameleons, but only with hues of brown and tan and white.
These are just one of the ten or so species of the Uroplatus genus. The henkeli is the most common among the importers and captive breeders of these awesome creatures.
Others include U. fimbriatus, which is the largest of the genus, U. sikorea, U. lineatus, U. phantasticus, and the list could go on.
What I breed and care for are the henkeli. They seem to be the hardiest of the Uroplatus.


Housing



I have 3 Henkel’s leaf tails in one 29-gallon aquarium. I would put no more than 3 in that much space. They live in the trees, so they need tons of climbing room and tons of things to climb on. I use a mixture of piet moss and bark (not cedar) for a substrate. The piet moss helps to keep humidity high for the gecko. They need about 75% to 100% humidity at all times. The best thing to use, if you have a large colony, is a misting system.
You can get one of these systems set up on a timer and it can tap right in to you water supply in your house. These systems can be somewhat pricey. I use a pump sprayer and mist the cage real good about 3 to 4 times a day. You will need a screen top with clips for the top of the enclosure. I would stay away from wooden enclosures because wood and water don’t make for a long lasting cage. Plus it will not hold humidity in as well. Some people house males together and have know problems with territorial battles, giving that there is plenty of space for them and the females.


HEATING AND LIGHTING


The temperture should be kept in high 70’s to low 80’s. The night time tempertures can drop to the mid 70’s. A full spectrum light that emits UVB will help in heating and in the performance of reproduction. No heat pad will really work, as the Uroplatus live mostly in the trees. The heat pad will never heat up the limbs in which they lay on.


FOOD


The Uroplatus are insectivorous, so they will eat domestic crickets, mealworms, moths, and grasshoppers.
Do not feed them items caught in the wild, for they might be carring pestdicides and that would result in death of the gecko.
If you are planning on feeding them millworms or waxwormss, they should be offered in a padded dish. The Uroplatus like to hang from the limbs and ambush their prey from above. This is another benefit of having bark as the substrate. I use a styrofoam bowl and place the worms in it. All crickets must be gutloaded with a hi calsium diet and dusted with D3 and calsuim. The dusting alone will not be enough, for the misting of the cage will wash it off.
I dust the crickets every feeding to ensure the vitamin intake. Water will be drank off of the leaves and branches. Ofteen licked off the side of the aquarium.
This is also the importants of misting the cage regularlly. The will not drink from a bowl or container filled with water.


BREEDING


Uroplatus breed in the spring and summer times of the year. They will lay 2 egg clutches, but some studies have seen 4 egg clutches. They will lay about 4 to 6 clutches a year.
Some people tend to separate the males from the females and introduce the males in at breeding time.
Then only to take them away after thy have done their part in reproduction. The female will lay here eggs in the bark and try to hide them.
The eggs are about a half of inch in diameter and are a leafy patern. They blend in well, just like the gecko, to the bark in the floor of the enclosure. These eggs will need to be incubated at about 78 degrees F.
It will take 60 to 100 days for them to hatch. Incubate the eggs artificially in perlite(to avoid mold growth) with a 1:1 ratio by weight, with water. The hatchling should be housed just as the parents are housed.
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