Amier
2025-12-22 10:58:51
No, cohabiting leopard geckos is generally not recommended due to high risks of aggression, bullying, and injury, even with females or siblings, as they are naturally solitary and territorial; while some keepers attempt it with huge enclosures, multiple resources, and constant monitoring, the consensus among experts is that separate housing prevents stress and health issues, ensuring better welfare. Why Cohabitation Fails: Territoriality: Males are highly territorial; cohabiting them leads to severe fighting, often resulting in serious injury or death. Bullying & Resource Guarding: Even females can become dominant, starving submissive geckos of food, heat, and hides, leading to health decline (malnourishment, stuck shed). Breeding Stress: Male-female cohabitation stresses females with constant mating demands and can lead to physical harm. Sudden Aggression: Geckos that seem fine can suddenly turn aggressive, even after years. If You're Determined (Expert Level Only): Massive Space: A 4x2x2 (40-gallon breeder minimum for one) is too small; a huge enclosure (like 4'x2' or larger) with distinct, separate warm/cool/moist zones is needed. Double Everything: Multiple hides (6+), food/water dishes, basking spots, and humid hides are essential to offer escape. Females Only: Only consider two or more females; never males together. Constant Monitoring: Be prepared to separate them immediately if issues arise, having a backup setup ready. The Safer, Recommended Approach: Keep leopard geckos in separate enclosures. They don't need companions to thrive; solitary housing meets their needs better.