Native Habitat of the Leopard Gecko & Setting up a Natural Enclosure

94
rate this page

By Whitney05


Leopard Gecko

The leopard gecko is the most common pet reptile in homes today. They're small and easy to care for. They come in a variety of colors and have a very docile temperament.

Leopard geckos are just overall one of the best beginner reptiles.

The biggest misconception about leopard geckos is that their native habitat is on sand. They're desert animals so it must be sand... Right? .... Wrong...

What is a Desert?

Leopard geckos are from the rocky deserts of Pakistan, India, and Afghanistan. This is a given.

But, what most people don't quite understand is that desert land is technically land of sparse vegetation and minimal rainfall and precipitation.

Desert does not mean dirt and sand. In reality only 20% of the Earth's deserts are composed of sand. Nearly all deserts are composed of rock and pebbles. There are of course several different types of deserts, each with slightly different environments and characteristics, but that of the leopard gecko is that composed of rock and compacted sand.



Setting up a Leopard Gecko Enclosure

Maybe you're asking why pet store employees throw that bag of sand in your buggy when you're making all your initial purchases. If it's not any good or natural for them, why do they promote it as such.

Simple. people tend to buy what they think is natural, and well whatever the guy at the pet store tells them they're going to need. Sand, either a play sand, vita- sand, or calci- sand, is the ideal of what a desert is, so it's sold for desert animals.

Don't buy it. Not even if you want to set up a naturalistic enclosure for your leopard gecko.

If you want to set up a naturalistic leopard gecko enclosure, you can and it's simple. The best way to go about it, is to go to Lowes or another home department store and purchase a box or two of slate tiles. Tiles come in a variety of colors and patterns. Use these in your tank to create a natural feel for the substrate. You may, also, want to consider adding a fake rock design to the enclosure.

If you want to go even more naturalistic, you can will want to make sure that about 40% of the enclosure is covered with rock and 10- 20% covered with live plants.

Mix fine- grained play sand, potting soil (without perlite- the white balls), and peat moss mix together at a 1:1:1 ratio, and place about 1- 1/2" of the mix at the bottom of the tank to serve as drainage for the plants. Go ahead and add the plants now. Cover the drainage material with sand/ soil mix (50:50 ratio), and then put the rocks and wood decorations in the tank. Fill any gaps with fine play sand.

Because about 60% of your tank will be of plants, tile, and wood, most of the sand will be covered, reducing the risk of sand ingestion.


Plant Safe for Reptiles

Because you want to make sure to include live plants, you want to make sure to know which plants are safe for reptiles and leopard geckos.

  • Aansevierias: snake plants such as Sansevieria trifasciata, S. t. hahnii, S horwoodii, S. kirkii pulchra, S. patens, and S. singularis
  • Zamioculcas zamiifolia
  • Cucurbits: such as Xerosicyos danguyi and Momordica rostrata
  • Yemen grape: Cissus rotundifolia
  • Euphobias: E. geroldii and the hybrid E. milli x E. lophogona
  • "Bonsai" plectranthus: such as Swedish ivy (Plectranthus ernstii)
  • Other plants can include: climbing aloe (Alo cilias), elephant bush (Portulacaria afra), and the Mexican caudexed fig (Ficus petiolaria)


The Herpetoculture of Leopard Geckos The Herpetoculture of Leopard Geckos
Price: $19.95
List Price: $19.99

For More Information

If you really want to set up a natural enclosure for your leopard gecko, you should really purchase The Herpetoculture of Leopard Geckos by Ron Tremper, Philippe de Vosjoli, and Roger Klingenberg.

The trio goes into great detail about setting up and properly caring for a natural enclosure for leopard geckos.

They discuss feeding techniques to further reduce risk of ingesting the loose sand that is visible, heating methods, and more.

NOTE: If you choose to go the all natural route, you cannot use a 10 gallon aquarium. You must get something at least a 20 gallon long (even a 29 has the same surface as a 20 long, so that's not going to matter). Because at least 20% of the surface will be covered with plants and such, you will take away from the start 20% or more of the surface for your leopard gecko. It's best to create a natural enclosure in a 40 gallon breeder.

NOTE: Just because you're creating a natural setting, it doesn't mean that you can house males together, adults and babies, etc. Yes, in The Herpetoculture of Leopard Geckos, the trio discuss an experiment that was successful as such, but remember that they have years and years of experience behind them. SO, it's best not to do it on your own, and no 3 years isn't enough experience to simulate the experiment at your home.

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub Small RSS Icon

ruminator profile image

ruminator  says:
5 months ago

yes - very interesting and unique!

hemant tirkey  says:
4 months ago

nice

Jon  says:
4 weeks ago

i read a book and it said sand was ok :/

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
4 weeks ago

That's not exactly what the book said. It actually says for older geckos there is less risk of housing on sand in regards to babies. So no you should not house a gecko under 1 year on sand. Unless 95% of it is covered.

Bex  says:
3 weeks ago

I think this is a great bit of info

its a shame so many books at pet shops say sand is ok

Whitney05 profile image

Whitney05  says:
3 weeks ago

Typically books say that that sand is ok for older geckos, but not younger geckos. I find that it's not ok for any age leopard gecko.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional



working