sometimes
With their mouth. We had a leopard gecko that ate crickets. Their feet are used only for walking, but they can bite a cricket really fast.
I think that you shouldn't cause honey is sticky right? so the gecko could get stuck in the honey of the honey could stick it's mouth shut so I do not think so
yes
Feeding/Diet: Round Island Day Geckos will eat any insects that land on the palm tree. They may try to move closer to their prey, or they will wait until it walks closer and grab it with its mouth. The gecko also eats pollen and nectar from the palm flowers. The gecko may also leave the palm tree to search for food such as fermenting fruit and ground-living insects.
Yes. However, the gecko only bites when frightened or if he mistakes your fingers for food. Also, they don't really have 'teeth' so their bite is very mild and startles you much more than it hurts. Most times it wont even break the skin!Not usually, my gecko never really bites unless you ticked him off. So only if there young and messing with him.
leopard gecko would just strike at it then grab it with mouth and eat it.
It is very very sick. Get it to the nearest vet, (yes vets treat geckos) or it might be too late. :( How did it look like when you first got it?
Geckos do not have any venomous glands in their body. They also have no method of transmitting the venom to a prey item, there are no fangs, or shooting glands. Although a gecko does not have venom, wounds can lead to infection. Be sure to thoroughly clean and disinfect any wounds from any animals mouth.
Use the BattleOn Forums, AdventureQuest section. Use the Q+A.
Never ever force feed a gecko it is harm full to their body to forcefully open the jaws of a gecko. If your animal is refusing to eat and there are physical signs of weight loss, a visit to the vet may be in store.
Yes, they can. One of my leos will lick your finger the second you put it up to his mouth. Some can come when called. Some will wink. It all pretty much depends on your gecko. All leopard geckos have things that make them special. If you take time with them, you will figure out what they can do. Hope this helps ~Julia
I would strongly recomend that you don't put baby leopard geckos in with adults until they are about 10-12 months of age, depending on the size of your baby. You want to make sure that your baby is able to grow with out stress of possible bullying from more dominant adult geckos. Also depending on the size of your adult gecko it could mistake your baby gecko as food. It isn't uncommon for adult geckos to eat pinkies (baby mice) so it isn't unlikely your adult could attempt to eat or strike at the baby. If your baby is a female it is not safe to introduce her to sexually mature males before she is sexually mature. An early pregnancy is not healty for your new gecko. Leopard geckos mature at about 10-12 months. Males will fight each other once they reach sexual maturity so they should never be put in the cage with an adult male no matter what their age or size. The role I live by is if the baby is grown enough to eat large super worms and pinkies it should be safe to live with any adult leopard geckos.