Neha Patil (Editor)

Coleonyx mitratus

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Squamata

Family
  
Gekkonidae

Scientific name
  
Coleonyx mitratus

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Suborder
  
Sauria

Subfamily
  
Eublepharinae

Higher classification
  
Coleonyx

Coleonyx mitratus Central American Banded Gecko Coleonyx mitratus Austin Reptile

Similar
  
Coleonyx, Reptile, Coleonyx elegans, Geckos, Coleonyx brevis

Coleonyx mitratus


Coleonyx mitratus, referred to as the Central American banded gecko, is a species of moderately-sized gecko in the genus Coleonyx, native to Central America and first identified by Wilhelm Peters in 1863. It is a member of the eyelid geckos.

Contents

Coleonyx mitratus Coleonyx mitratus photo Reptarium

Gecko bandeado coleonyx mitratus


Description

Length (including tail) reaches 190mm, with the tail encompassing 50-54% of the total. As indicated by their name, these geckos have brown, black and yellow horizontal bands on their dorsal surfaces.

Biology

Coleonyx mitratus Central American Banded Gecko Coleonyx mitratus Austin Reptile

The Central American banded gecko is crepuscular and hides in a burrow in the soil during the day. It emerges at dusk to forage for insects. If threatened, like most geckos, it can lose its tail. Most will regenerate lost tails within a year.

Distribution

These geckos are found from Guatemala south to Costa Rica.

In captivity

Coleonyx mitratus httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Central American banded geckos are popular as pets. A single Central American banded gecko can be housed in a 10-gallon terrarium.

Coleonyx mitratus Central American Banded Gecko Coleonyx mitratus by Twan Leenders

Coleonyx mitratus Central American Banded Gecko Coleonyx mitratus by Twan Leenders

References

Coleonyx mitratus Wikipedia