Cat gecko

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cat gecko
Cat gecko (Aeluroscalabotes felinus)

Cat gecko ( Aeluroscalabotes felinus )

Systematics
Superordinate : Scale lizards (Lepidosauria)
Order : Scale reptiles (Squamata)
without rank: Geckos (gekkota)
Family : Lidgeckos (Eublepharidae)
Genre : Aeluroscalabotes
Type : Cat gecko
Scientific name of the  genus
Aeluroscalabotes
Boulenger , 1885
Scientific name of the  species
Aeluroscalabotes felinus
( Günther , 1864)

The cat gecko , also fox-faced lidcko ( Aeluroscalabotes felinus ) is a tree-dwelling (arboreal) species from the family of the lidckos (Eublepharidae).

Cat geckos are found in Indonesia , Malaysia , Singapore and Thailand , where they prefer to inhabit cool, moist, montane rainforests with streams or rivers. They grow up to 18 cm long, with the males being smaller than the females. The top of the body is red-brown with white dots, the chin and sometimes the belly are white. As a member of the Lidgeckos, he lacks the typical adhesive pads on his fingers for geckos, but as adaptations to their arboreal way of life, they use their tail as a grasping organ and can oppose their claws. Cat geckos mainly feed on small arthropods .

The animals are taken into the terrarium in the wild from time to time , whereby most of the individuals die during transport. In Thailand there is a law that prohibits the catch, trade, import and export of cat geckos.

The nominate form A. felinus felinus was described by Günther in 1864, the first description of the subspecies A. felinus multituberculatus was in 1927 by Kopstein.

A cat gecko ( Aeluroscalabotes felinus )

Web links

Commons : Cat Gecko  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

swell

  • Thomas Ulber: Leopard geckos in the terrarium. Bede-Verlag, Ruhmannsfelden 1995, ISBN 3-927997-81-1 (small part about cat gecko).