African fat-tailed geckos and skinks have different habitat and care requirements, making them generally unsuitable for cohabitation. Fat-tailed geckos prefer a more humid environment, while many skinks thrive in drier conditions. Additionally, differences in diet and temperament can lead to stress or aggression between the two species. It's best to house them separately to ensure their health and well-being.
In Africa.
I would definitely not recommend it, they will probably fight.
No. Male geckos will fight for territory.
Sand skinks live in the sand.
It depends what breed they are really, also it is illegal in some countries to take geckos and skinks from the wild, such as new zealand. Tiny pink geckos in American Southwest often live in homes, and are useful to help control small bugs.
Yes blue tongue skinks are born live,not from eggs
no
It depends what type of geckos you have. You can most likely tell by going on a website that specializes the gecko you want to learn more about. They most likely will tell you which rainforest a gecko lives in. But if you want to learn which rainforest geckos live in, the answer is that all geckos do not live in rainforests. Some live in deserts.
long tailed lizards, green anoles, and house geckos get along fine (don't put a knight anole in very aggressive
Geckos live in all continents except Antarctica.
Tokay geckos are native to North Eastern Asia. Including: Vietnam, Malyasia, Indonesia.
Skinks live in gardens