Hi Lyle. I found the P. laticauda angularis are even more agressive and I always keep them in pairs and then still keep an eye on them. P. laticuada are only slightly less agressive. This year I had a laticauda male beat a female up, and within four days she died of her injuries. They were a pair that seemed to get along. I've absolutely found that juveniles practice hierachies. The less agressive gecko usually looses something: growth, skin, life.
Hey, I've seen that head bobbing behavior ; ) Leann ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lyle Puente" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2003 4:09 PM Subject: Re: [gecko]hierarchies in p.laticauda > > >So, my question -- does it appear that I have two males and a female? And > >should I take #3 out and give him a home of his own? > > I would remove him right away...if by chance he is a male things could get > very ugly. Boys never get along...just get me and Jodi in the same room and > we start bobbing our heads right away. hahaha > Leann, you like these in pairs only, no? > > Lyle Puente > PO Box 438 > Crompond, NY 10517 > President -Global Gecko Association > http://www.gekkota.com/ > > My Brothers Banned website > http://www.mybrothersbanned.com > > > _______________________________________________ > Global Gecko Association > http://www.gekkota.com > Classifieds > http://www.gekkota.com/cgi-gekkota/classifieds.cgi > gecko mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.gekkota.com/mailman/listinfo/gecko > _______________________________________________ Global Gecko Association http://www.gekkota.com Classifieds http://www.gekkota.com/cgi-gekkota/classifieds.cgi gecko mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gekkota.com/mailman/listinfo/gecko

