Assuming you mean 2. Yes you can. However you must monitor them closely as if one grows faster than the other and the weight difference becomes too large the bigger one may stress the smaller one or attack it. At sexual maturity they will need to be separated if they are two males as they will probably start fighting. If male and female from the same clutch and you want to keep them together please don't incubate the eggs. As all captive cresteds come from a select few originals we need to keep the gene pool as large as possible to avoid all the problems associated with inbreeding.
no, crested geckos are solitary animals, they will kill and probably eat the other animal
Not only do you have to take solitary and territorial into consideration but the climates for the two species: The Common House Gecko otherwise known as the Hemidactylus turcicus Or Mediterranean house gecko, are native to the regions of:
- southern Europe, it has spread over much of the world and established stable populations far from its origins. Due to this it holds no threatened or endangered status. It can be found in Portugal, Spain, France, Italy (including Lampedusa island, Elba), Albania, Greece, (incl. Kalymnos, Paros, Antiparos, Despotiko, Lesbos, Chios, Limnos, Samos, Samothraki, Milos, Tinos, Crete), Malta, coastal Croatia (except western Istria), Adriatic islands, Cyprus, Turkey, northern Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Libya, Egypt, Lebanon, northern Yemen (Socotra Archipelago), Somalia, Eritrea, Kenya, southern Iran, Iraq, Oman, Qatar, Pakistan, India, Balearic Islands (Island Addaya Grande), Canary Islands (introduced to Gran Canaria and Tenerife), Panama, Puerto Rico, Belize, Mexico (Baja California, Chihuahua, Durango, Nuevo Leon, Yucatan; introduced), Cuba (introduced). It has also been introduced to the southern USA (Louisiana, Alabama, Texas, Arizona, Florida, Arkansas, Mississippi, South Carolina, Georgia, Oklahoma, Virginia, Maryland, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Kansas, Tennessee)
The crested geckos are native from New Caledonia where temps never exceed 85F. The crested geckos cannot withstand the heat, while the house geckos love to bask in temperatures from 85-90F. The humidity requirements are much too different as well. The crested need 50-80% while the house gecko require 40-70%
yes baby cresteds can be kept together as long as they are all about the same size. be careful though because they may lose their tail (which doesn't grow back on a crested) because their cage mate(s).
no, crested geckos are solitary animal they will kill and might eat the other animal
no
no crested geckos are solitary animal's, and will kill and might eat the other animal.
A crested gecko is a crested gecko, i think you may have mistaken this as morphs or you meant another species of gecko; if another species of gecko, no, if another morph yes.
Crested Gecko. Golden Geckos are much faster and don't like being held. Get a crested gecko.
These two species are coming from two different parts of the world, requiring a different environment. The golden gecko receives ambient temperatures of 97-107F. The crested gecko needs an ambient temperature of 66-80F. Concluding that these two species cannot live together.
no because they'lll frick
Day gecko, leopard gecko and crested gecko
The crested gecko is a species of gecko native to southern New Caledonia. This creatures are also known as New Caledonian Crested Gecko, Guichenot's Giant Gecko or Eyelash Gecko.
15 years if properly cared for.The average lifespan is 10-15 years - though there are always exceptions.
Crested geckos can live anywhere up to 15-20 years if properly cared for.
You do not feed your crested gecko Day gecko diet. The diet your speaking of Is produced by Repashy or T-Rexx, both of these manufacturer's create a Meal replacement powder designed specifically for crested geckos. Crested gecko diet.