Good try I suppose, but it has no bumps or spikes, :ODoes kinda look like a bynoe gecko but I’m no expert.
I was catching the geckos off my house to feed to a burtons legless lizard I found but the geckos are smart you know they don’t come out if they feel threatened.
Long storey short I let my Burton’s go down the scrub. I think it was the right thing to do.
What are you on about? The two species of gecko you've mentioned look nothing alike and neither are the species photographed here. I recommend you accept that your identification was wrong, have a decent look as to why you were wrong, and use this as a learning experience.Well I’m not second guessing I’m saying it’s a barking bynoe gecko same thing as the ahg
Looks to be a marbled gecko (Christinus marmoratus), but NSW is a rather large place and my gecko identification is a bit rusty. Could you please narrow down the area a bit to make things easier?
What are you on about? The two species of gecko you've mentioned look nothing alike and neither are the species photographed here. I recommend you accept that your identification was wrong, have a decent look as to why you were wrong, and use this as a learning experience.
Cheers, Cameron
They're certainly not. For one thing, byone's are a strictly terrestrial species that lack toe pads for climbing, so you'll never see them up hanging off a shed wall. That and byone's geckos are not found in near Sydney. And no they do not interbreed.Yeah ok Cameron. I admit I’m wrong. But for my further learning bynoe geckos are not the same as Asian house geckos? I get the patterned ones up the shed. Do they interbreed?
Certainly does look like a Marbled Gecko. If it is then it must be a hitchhiker because Sydney is way out of its range.
Looks to be a marbled gecko (Christinus marmoratus), but NSW is a rather large place and my gecko identification is a bit rusty. Could you please narrow down the area a bit to make things easier?
What are you on about? The two species of gecko you've mentioned look nothing alike and neither are the species photographed here. I recommend you accept that your identification was wrong, have a decent look as to why you were wrong, and use this as a learning experience.
Cheers, Cameron
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