Turtles are a semi aquatic species, while the crested gecko is a semi arboreal species. It is best as a hobbyist to replicate the natural environment for reptile species. In the wild, it would be very unlikely that a turtle would co exist with a gecko, so in captivity it would be best to leave these two animals separate. Most geckos require an extremely humid or dry area to live, not necessarily wet and filled with water. There is also the possibilities that a gecko can drown in water deeper than a shallow drinking bowl.
They won't get along in a man made environment, such as a tank. If it were outside in a pond, then it would be okay, but if they're used to being separate, like if you bought them in a pet store, do not put them together. You will stress them out if they're not used to being with other animals. If this were in the wild it would be a totally different circumstance.
Yes, turtles and lizards live together in natural ecosystems. They cannot; however, live together in the same container in captivity.
no
The difference between a turtle and a chameleon is that a turtle is a animal that has a shell for a body and could live in the water or in land, and a chameleon is like a lizard that changes colors according where it is.
I don’t jnow
No, a live lizard has not been a lizard pin.
A lizardess.
snake, crocodile, turtle
reptiles
Lizard+mutant(ninja turtle)
yes they do but if you want action get a snapping turtle get that lizard put it in the tank that lizad gone get swallowed
no,because koopa is a turtle and bowser is a lizard
strut
Yes, a maggot can eat a live lizard. There was a fatally wounded lizard on my driveway. It had a large hole, and maggots were along and in it.
In a tank