Trevor is Not Available for Dinner right now, it is time to be Fashionable!
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@slizz-and-grem
Trevor is Not Available for Dinner right now, it is time to be Fashionable!
he's so cute I love him so much
wtf dude? Goodnight I guess 😂
Day 145
Evilest picture I've taken of her yet. Freak.
not gonna deny inflating your geckos shed looks funny as fuck but uuuuh that can't be good, like that whole video @kaijutegu care to weigh in here?
Yeah, you shouldn't peel* your lizard!
*in most** cases
**sometimes you need to peel the lizard but this is not one of those times
Sometimes a lizard will need help peeling. Like my tegu, I take her toes off for her if she doesn't take them off herself. But it doesn't look like this- I'll grab shed that's completely lifted off that she just hasn't gotten rid of. Sometimes when her nose is peeling, she'll come find me and rub against some surface- usually my shoe- to get the shed off. But she knows when the shed needs to come off; I don't pull it off. Generally if you pet your lizard gently and the shed comes off, that's fine. But!
This is a leopard gecko, and you really shouldn't be helping them with their shed like this. Leopard geckos (and many other geckos) have teensy tiny scales that are easily damaged by pulling on the skin. You're far more likely to hurt them than help them, especially where the skin doesn't lift off at the nose and around the mouth. You can also really damage their eyes by pulling on the eyelids, and if you're helping a gecko without eyelids, you can damage the scale that covers the eye. Inflating the shed like this forces air under the shed layer, which can lift it prematurely and damage the scales underneath.
If your leopard gecko has truly stuck shed, like you've seen it lift off and they've gotten most of the shed off but it's still stuck around the toes, you can bump humidity, do saunas, have them soak their feet- but inflating the skin with a straw isn't ideal.
Fortunately for you, you don't have to be so incorrect! You can read the NUMEROUS comments on the post which were made before your reblog that explain why this is bad for the gecko.
Sir Pablo update! He has grown SO MUCH in the past month. He is a delightful little fellow.
the beautiful large deborah
happ new 2 u 2, snek
Took my son to see Santa! He was a very well behaved🧡
Leucistic Ball Python study. Based on a leucistic morph breed.
New years blessing snake. 🎉
destruction
we persevere. it's gonna suck though
It’s so fascinating to me that we’ve only been breeding Komodo dragons in captivity for thirty years. In that time, our understanding of them has actually really revolutionized the way we understand the social lives and behaviors of lizards in general, and it’s mostly thanks to this lady right here, who was born 30 years ago on September 13, 1992.
Kraken was the first Komodo to be bred in captivity. She hatched out at GMU, but was raised at the National Zoo. Her parents were wild-caught dragons- there’s still WC dragons in the AZA today- and this one specific individual probably did more to revolutionize lizard care in professional settings than any other individual lizard throughout zoo history.
Until Kraken, social enrichment wasn’t a thing people thought about. It wasn’t something anybody felt was necessary for lizards, because they were just… lizards. Sure, some keepers would play with their favorites, but it wasn’t until the National Zoo started documenting what she was doing that anybody realized how much Komodo dragons like to play with us too.
Kraken’s not in that video, but she’s the one who inspired all of the social studies that have been done on captive Komodo dragons. When she was at the National Zoo, her keepers started getting curious when, for no apparent reason, she kept gingerly stealing things from peoples’ pockets and tugging on their shoelaces. So they started giving her stuff- Frisbees, blankets, soda cans, anything she showed an interest in.
She played with them, just like a mammal might. The way play behavior is described in psychology is a given activity that’s voluntary, repeated, and conducted under “relatively benign” circumstances. Keeper staff found that her conduct during the study met all of these criteria. “Kraken,” they wrote, had clearly demonstrated “play-like behavior with objects and even with humans (tug-of-war).” Moreover, she “could discriminate between prey and nonprey” while showing “varying responses” with different items (rubber rings, shoes, etc.). (There’s an excellent book on Komodo dragons that has an entire chapter devoted to her.)
Kraken died several years ago, but her legacy continues today. There’s several of her descendants still in the AZA, and the intelligence and social needs she demonstrated led to the improvement of life for these guys- and other lizards. The Komodo dragon program has been an eye opener, not just for reptile conservation, but for understanding reptile intelligence and how this incredible clade of animals functions.
Happy birthday to the lizard who changed it all.
This my vivarium 🏠
lick