A juvenile is an animal that is past the baby stages of life but not quite reaching adulthood. This would be the toddler stage of a human. Soon the animal will reach sub adult, meaning they are almost ready for breeding, and then adulthood.
The life cycle of a gecko begins with an egg being laid by the female. The egg hatches into a baby gecko, which is called a hatchling. The hatchling grows and develops into a juvenile gecko, which eventually matures into an adult gecko. Throughout its life cycle, the gecko goes through stages of growth and development, from egg to hatchling to juvenile to adult.
The different life stages of a leopard gecko are egg, hatchling, juvenile, subadult, and adult.
The life cycle of a leopard gecko begins with hatching from an egg, then growing into a juvenile gecko. As it matures, it reaches adulthood and can reproduce. The gecko continues to live and grow until it eventually passes away.
The stages of a gecko's life cycle include egg, hatchling, juvenile, and adult. Geckos lay eggs, which hatch into young geckos called hatchlings. As they grow, they become juveniles before reaching adulthood.
The scientific name for Tokay Gecko is Gekko gecko.
All geckos start out as hatching's. They then hit a juvenile stage by about 2-6months of age. shortly following the juvenile stage is the sub adult which would be the stage that lasts until maturity.
They have the same name, but their color might be different. The spots and striped might be at their tail, the whole body, or the head. Their skin colors can be yellow, pinkish-orange, and that's all i know. :D
Vanessa Giancamilli has written: 'Platypus Creek' 'Gecko Gathering' 'Seagull by the shore' -- subject(s): Juvenile fiction, Herring gull, Gulls, Fiction
Day gecko, leopard gecko and crested gecko
I would say a Crested Gecko, although you can get a colourful gecko like a loepard gecko
Assuming you mean gecko, its a lizard. Google them, there is the Leopard Gecko, Crested Gecko, and the Gargoyle Gecko, just to get you started
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.