No ! Gecko's are desert creatures, while Anoles are forest dwellers. Additionally, Anoles are highly territorial and will fight other lizards who invade their space. The golden rule is - if reptiles are not found together in their natural habitat - they should never be housed together in captivity !
No, absolutely not. If you are asking this question, you have probably NOT done enough research as of yet to own either animal as a pet. Please purchase a book on proper care, and read it carefully, then buy all equipment and set it up with stable temperatures, before purchasing any reptile pet.
Green anoles come from subtropical Florida, South Carolina, Louisiana, etc. They prefer a warm, humid environment with plenty of leafy plants and climbing branches.
Leopard geckos come from the deserts of Pakistan and surrounding areas, where they dwell in rocky scrubland areas. They require a dry enclosure with a humid hide to retreat to, and a solid cage bottom (no sand--use paper towel, newspaper, or slate tile). They are terrestrial. They are many times as large as a green anole, and would gladly eat one.
None - they wouldn't co-exist in the wild - so why force them to co-habit in captivity !
definitely not a good idea, they tend to eat &/or torture them
No, a leopard gecko can live with other leopard geckos, if both are female. During the breeding season, males can be housed with females but not any other reptile, unless you want a dead gecko.
NO!
No way!
Asia.
In captivity? none.
Temperate Desert.
On average, the leopard gecko will live 5-10 years in the wild due to predators but in captivity, the oldest recorded leopard gecko lived to be 27 years old. Youtube "dink the leopard gecko"
I would say somewhere by 8/12 month's possibly more depending on the leopard gecko.
my leopard gecko has also stopped eating and she is pretty old too so I think this might be the case. 19 is fairly old for a leopard gecko to live.
If properly cared for, any Leopard Gecko can live up to 20 years.