My Leopard Gecko Quit Eating

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By Whitney05



Leopard Gecko Diet

Leopard Geckos are one of the best beginner reptiles that you can find. They're a smaller reptile that takes up less room. They come in bright colors, and have a fairly simple habitat and husbandry requirement.

For the most part if you are caring for a gecko properly, you should not have any problems with it's diet or it eating, but there are exceptions to that. Just make sure that you do know how to properly care for a leopard gecko to prevent health concerns and mishap.

Make sure that you know the proper diet for a leopard gecko before you start to panic about it not eating. Maybe you're just not feeding it the right diet. Leopard geckos are insectivores , meaning they eat insects. Don't feed insects from your backyard, make sure to buy insects from an online source, pet store, or even bait shop.

A good staple diet for a leopard gecko can consists of crickets, mealworms, or silkworms. All are nutritious feeders that leopard geckos will readily take. You may also want to consider small discoid roaches as a good staple. Waxworms and butterworms are good treats, but should never be fed on a regular basis to prevent reptile obesity. Phoenix worms are a good alternative, but remember that they are pricey, so I'd recommend just keeping them as healthy treats.

Now, if your leopard gecko quits eating, you really don't need to worry unless it's loosing weight. It's not uncommon for leopard geckos to skip a meal every now an then, so unless you see weight loss, don't panic just yet.

Now, that being said, if you are having problems getting your leopard gecko to eat, there are many reasons and solutions.


sand was only for picture
sand was only for picture

Reasons a Leopard Gecko Stops Eating

When you start to notice that the tail shows signs that it is losing mass, you then need to figure out what's wrong. There can be a number of reasons that the gecko has stopped eating enough to begin to lose tail mass.

  • First you should check the temperatures in the enclosure to make sure that they are the right degree. The hot side needs to be between 90 and 92F. Measure the temperatures in the enclosure with a digital thermometer with a probe. The stick on thermometers are NOT accurate byb any means, and that includes if you place it on the floor of the tank.
  • Consider what substrate you're housing the gecko on. Loose substrates such as play sand, calci-sand, vita-sand, silica sand, wood chips, bark, potting soil, gravel, curshed corn cob, walnut shells, or any other substrate that is sold in a bag that you could find at a hardware store. Loose substrates can cause impaction, which is potentiall fatal.
  • Are you housing multiple geckos together? If so, the larger gecko may be bullying or stressing out the smaller gecko. This can occur in geckos of the same age and nearly the same size- one will always be just a little bigger than another. Remember just because you don't see it, doesn't mean it doesn't happen. Leopard geckos are nocturnal, meaning most of their activity occurs at night, while you sleep.
  • Have you recently changed the geckos enclosure, added
  • decorations, removed decorations, rearranged your room, moved the leopard gecko's cage, or anything that would involve changing the environment in or around the leopard geckos enclosure? If so, this could cause the gecko to stop eating for a few days to a week or so, depending on the gecko and the amount of change. Change doesn't affect all geckos, but it does affect some.
  • Is the gecko new to you home? New geckos may not eat for a few days, up to a week due to stress of changing environments.
  • What was the gecko being fed prior to you bringing it home? If you change what the gecko is used to, it might not take to the new feeder too well.
  • Where did you purchase the gecko? The most common and most convienent place to buy reptiles is the pet store, but this isn't always the best place. Pet stores commonly have ill reptiles that either suffer from parasites, bacteria, and fungus. Many times reptiles at pet stores are housed on sand or othe loose substrates, which means that the gecko could come home with impaction for you to deal with. Many reptiles at pet stores are housed inappropriately, such as too many reptiles in one enclosure, multiple males in an enclosure, sick reptiles with healthy reptiles, inaccurate temperatures, and multiple species in an enclosure. All of these things can contribute to illness.


Possible Solutions to Getting Your Geck to Eat

If you've deducedthe problem, then go ahead and fix it ASAP.

If you're temperatures are 90 to 92F on the hot side, then that's not the problem. No sand ever- no sand impaction. Gecko you've had for months nad is housed alone. Ok... So, here we start.

You ant to first rule out parasites or any other underlying health concerns, so take a trip to the vet. Your average cat and dog vet isn't going to be able to help you, so make sure to have a vet who specializes in reptiles. If the vet finds that internal parasites is the culprit, he will prescribe medicine to rid the gecko of its parasites.

If the gecko still refuses to eat, you can try a different food item. I have had leopard geckos eat mealworms for as far as I could remember and sudden stop eating. Have no parasites or worms. But drastically loosing weight. I decided one day to throw in a few crickets in the enclosure, and they were quickly eaten. To this day, the two leopard geckos eta crickets versus the mealworms that had always been on. I don't know what caused the change in taste buds, but something did. It could be as simple as that. Try changing to a different feeder insect.

If that doesn't work, you may need to try a special leopard gecko diet. This is a formulated slushy concoction, created to help leopard geckos gain weight and get the proteins and vitamins that they're not getting by not eating. This is not a quick fix or a solution. The slushy mix, created by Marcia at Golden Gat Geckos, is only to help provide essential vitamins, minerals, and proteins to your gecko. You still need to find the problem so that you can decide the proper solutin. The slushy mix will hopefully buy you some time to figure out the problem.


Reptile Supplements

JURASSICAL DRY 75G JURASSICAL DRY 75G
Price: $4.26
Tetra Terrafauna Reptocal Reptile Supplement Tetra Terrafauna Reptocal Reptile Supplement
Price: $2.49
Natures Reptile Vita-Spray - 16 oz. Natures Reptile Vita-Spray - 16 oz.
Price: $5.47
FLUCKER LIQUID VITAMIN SPRAY 8 OZ FLUCKER LIQUID VITAMIN SPRAY 8 OZ
Price: $10.37
List Price: $21.15

Leopard Gecko Slushy Mix

I have used the slushy mixture and successfully gotten leopard geckos eating on their own again. It took some time and work to do so, but they've been eating on their own since.

To make the slushy you need:

  • 1 small can of Hill's a/d pet food (available at most vet's)
  • 1/4-1/3 cup of Ensure (any flavor but chocolate. I prefer vanilla for my geckos)
  • 1 jar of squash baby food
  • 1/4-1/3 cup pedialyte
  • 2 tablets of milk thistle (herbal supplement, liver purifier, found at drug stores)
  • 1/2 tsp calcium powder
  • 1/2 tsp vitamin powder
  • 1 large handful of mealworms (I've also used crickets)

Directions:

  • Blend ALL ingredients in a blender or food processor, slowly adding the mealworms as you blend
  • Puree all ingredients until completely smooth
  • Pour into ice trays and freeze
  • Store the cubes in ziplock bags

When you use a cube, thaw it out in a small container, this is where the empty baby food containers come in handy. Use a small eye dropper, filling it full, put a drop at a time on the gecko's nose, letting him lick it.

What I did when it came to feeding the slushy was feed the gecko one eye dropper twice a day to start. After a few days to a week decrease it to once a day. I'd continue once a day, a fully eye dropper of slushy mix, for a bout a week or so more. Then stop giving it anymore. I would wait a day or two, the gecko not being provided food, and then attempt to give the gecko either crickets or mealworms, whichever it was used to eating. Usually, this method was successful, as the gecko had been used to eating daily then going without food for a few days, made it hungry enough to eat on its own.

If you decide to try another feeder insect or the slushy mix first. And the gecko isn't gaining any weight, you should DEFINATELY pay a visit to the vet before something happens to the gecko.

One of my geckos that had to be given the gecko slushy.
One of my geckos that had to be given the gecko slushy.

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Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
3 days ago

Meg that sounds great.

Bluesnow take the gecko to a vet to make sure that it doesn't have parasites, as parasiteare very common in pet store reptiles. This oculd be the cause of the lack of appetite. Make sure that both geckos are housed separately, as well, and make sure that the temps are right around 90F.

leon, the digital thermometers are only like $10 so there's no need to devote the ole paycheck. But definitely do the vet.

MeG  says:
3 days ago

My lizard lives!!! Her eyes are compleatly clear from the eye medication and the're beauteful! She loves to eat now and practically begs, it's funny. And she's all reactive and happy and everything! (and turns out, I was right about her having a little MBD, the vet said so) But he said I'm taking GREAT care of her too! She's all better!

Bluesnow  says:
4 days ago

my sister's gecko can't eat on her own ever since we got her from the pet store. the gecko is way skinnier than mine. I've been forcefeeding it. Should I try the slushie mix?

leon  says:
4 days ago

It's not in the winter, she does it right in the middle of summer. That said, I don't think it's a problem with the temps, but I just got a job and I intend to devote my first paycheck to her, so I'll get a digital thermostat then.

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
5 days ago

You could try bumping the temps. I've never had a problem with them fasting (if you're speaking of during the winter period). Make sure that your temps are at 90F. Use a digital thermometer with a probe to accurately read your temps.

leon  says:
5 days ago

Yeah the vet is defintiely due. I'll openly admit that i left it wayyy too long. It was just that she does this fasting thing once a year so i think it started out as that, and i was just waiting for her to decide to eat again in her own time like she always does. but then i went away for a weekend and my sister forgot to try to feed her while i was away so i think i might have missed that smaall opening between when she wanted to start eating again and when she was too weak to do so in that time i was away, and didn't realize until it was too late. sorry about the run ons again. eeven im having trouble re reading this lol

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
6 days ago

Hopefully she will recover. But if it happens again don't wait until the last minute, especially if you can see the bones and whatnot. A vet trip was probably in need a while back.,

leon  says:
6 days ago

thanks. Honestly I think she might need it. All of her bones are visible including her skull and some gland like things behind her ears that pulse like a heart beat. Given how quickly she's begun to recover though, I'm pretty confident she'll fully recover with enough time.

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
6 days ago

Definitely take the gecko to a vet Monday. That way you will know what's wrong and  you can fix it. Good luck

leon  says:
6 days ago

I'm gonna take her in to the vet on Monday. I only haven't because all the vets were closed this weekend for some reason. I've been feeding her every few hours or so from an eyedropper and she seems to be gaining energy slowly but steadily.

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
6 days ago

Hopefully she will pull through, take special care. I would consider a vet just to make sure that everything is ok medically with her.

leon  says:
6 days ago

Well actually I don't really need the slushy mix anymore I don't think. My gecko Gizmo just stopped eating like a month ago or something and she was really on her last legs because there didnt seem to be anything wrong with her and she wouldnt accept forcefeeding or anything, so I was hoping the slushy mix might appeal to her more, but then just today she kinda randomly started accepting regular forcefeeding and she's already showing signs of an increase in energy and she's a teeny bit less freakishly skinny since this morning so I think as long as she doesn't change her mind about forcefeeding again she should pull through. thanks anyways though and sorry for the run on sentnce. I'm just a bit excited that she's eating. It's weird to see her alert and paying attention because just yesterday she was falling aslleep in my hands and I was considering putting her down.

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
7 days ago

Honestly, I'm not sure if the loud sound bothers him or not.The slushy mix can vary i terms of price because the price of the items will depend on where you live and where you buy the items. The slushy mix is great to help geckos get nutrients that they need if htey're on antibiotics or are refusing food (which could be caused by a medical condition). What is wrong with your gecko that she needs to put on weight? Simple crickets and mealworms should be able to help her plump up if she's medically healthy.

leon  says:
7 days ago

plus would you recommend one of those liquid supplement things the vets give you for malnourished lizards or the slushy mix more in terms of helping my gecko gain weight and get back on her feet?

leon  says:
8 days ago

also what does the slushy mix generally end up costing in total? thanks

leon  says:
8 days ago

is music bad for gecvkos ears or do they hear about the same as we do? cuz i play my music in the same room i keep my gecko and im not sure if its a good idea or not

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
8 days ago

it's not uncommon. Younger geckos eat more and at 4 months the gecko could be going through a growth spurt.

Jon  says:
9 days ago

hey iy's me again, is it normal for my 4 month gecko to be eating over 20 small crickets a day? thanks

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
10 days ago

Kevin sometime the supplement can take days to work which is why you shoudn't wait until the last minute and hope for miracles. Also many of the commercial supplements suck. lol. typically the blue spot on the belly is the liver, but it can also be impaction, depending on what you have housed the gecko on. Kevin, I'm sorry to hear baout your gecko.

Meg, hopefully your gecko will prosper now.

kevin  says:
10 days ago

my leopard gecko is about to pass away.

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