SBP
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- Messages
- 65
- Location
- Omaha, Nebraska
At what percent accuracy can most breeders sex a baby Leopard Gecko?
Steve
Steve
Could you say a little more about your crypto concern (without mentioning specific breeders)? Was there reason to suspect or did the idea that crypto is around put you off?
Aliza
So this is what I can tell you from my personal experience:
This is my 10th season breeding leopard geckos (I also breed African Fat tails, gargoyles and Coleonyx geckos). When I first started 10 years ago, I did get a few geckos from large pet stores, but for the past 8-9 years, all my geckos have come from breeders that I trust (not that they can guarantee 100% that none of their geckos have crypto). I have never had problems with crypto or any leopard gecko disease that affected a bunch of my geckos (besides bites or other injuries, the only significant medical problems I've had in the past 10 years are very occasional respiratory infections, one case of egg binding and 2 sudden, inexplicable deaths, not due to crypto given the progression).
Someone on another forum suggested that breeders should test all their geckos for crypto and send a certificate to buyers. At $35 or so per test, that's not something I feel I can do. I guess if a customer wanted to buy a gecko from me and requested I test for crypto and was willing to pay the fee, I'd do it. Clearly if any gecko I own did develop crypto I'd test everyone and bear the cost.
To my mind it's a little like bedbugs. I'm a home care therapist and I go into 3-5 homes every day. There's a lot of publicity about the bedbug epidemic in the area where I live. I try to be reasonably careful (but I'm not going to go into every house wearing disposable gowns and booties nor am I going to fumigate myself every day before I go back into my own house), but I'm not going to quite my job or obsess about the possibility of bedbugs. I've been doing home care for 30 years and have not had the problem yet (knock on wood).
I think crypto is something to be aware of and concerned about. It informs my decision not to buy from big pet stores because I think there's less control of inventory. While it's true that there may be many gecko keepers dealing with crypto who just don't dare post on forums, I've only seen one "my gecko has crypto" thread on all of the 5 forums I read (and it wasn't on this one).
I'm not trying to convince you to get a leopard gecko no matter what, but did want to make the point that the prevalence of crypto may not be as rampant as some sources suggest. I hope you come up with something that works for you and that you continue to get enjoyment from reptile keeping.
Aliza
If you're looking for a gecko around $20 your best bet would be a pet store or reptile show. You may get really lucky but most of the geckos around that price will be pet quality and have a slight defect, unknown genetic backgrounds or possibly double hets from a test breeding. Since there are three incompatible albino strains in leopard geckos most folks that are breeding try to guarantee that their animals only have genes for one strain and the other two are not present. Because of this, having more than one strain as a possibility greatly reduces the value of any babies to breeders but it doesn't make them any less awesome as pets! Good luck finding what you're after!