What is a southern leaf-tailed gecko?
The southern leaf-tailed gecko, also known as a broad-tailed gecko, is a small sized lizard native to the Sydney basin and surrounds.
The scientific name for the species is Phyllurus platurus and the traditional Darug name for southern leaf-tailed geckos is bayagin.
What do southern leaf-tailed geckos look like?
Southern leaf-tailed geckos have a flat body with a distinctive broad ‘leaf’ shaped tail. They are covered in rough, spiky scales that are a brown or grey mottled pattern, resembling the sandstone habitat where they live. Unlike other geckos they have claws rather than pads on the ends of their toes. They can grow to a length of 15 centimetres from the tip of the snout to the tip of the tail.
Where do southern leaf-tailed geckos live?
The southern leaf-tailed gecko lives in urban areas and coastal sandstone heath. They use their colour to camouflage against bark or rock. During the day they shelter in sandstone rock crevices or under rocks. They have also been known to shelter in people’s garages, camouflaging with the brick walls.
What do southern leaf-tailed geckos eat?
Southern leaf-tailed geckos are nocturnal. They will hide and sleep during the day and then emerge at night to feed. They are ambush predators so will rest motionless and wait for prey before grabbing it.
Southern leaf-tailed geckos are insectivorous and eat invertebrates such as spiders, crickets, moths, beetles and cockroaches.
What is the life cycle of southern leaf-tailed geckos?
Southern leaf-tailed geckos can lay up to three clutches of eggs a year with one to two eggs in each clutch. They live an average of eight years in the wild.
What adaptations do southern leaf-tailed geckos have to their environment?
Southern leaf-tailed geckos are nocturnal therefore they are commonly found sheltering in sandstone crevices during the day. Their flat body is ideal for squeezing into these areas and the mottled brown pattern of their scales helps them to camouflage against the rock.
Southern leaf-tailed geckos store fat in their tails. This allows them to go extended periods without having to eat frequently such as during the cooler winter months.
When a southern leaf-tailed gecko is threatened or attacked it will discard its tails as a decoy so it can escape to safety. This strategy is called caudal autotomy. It will re-grow another tail and the missing tail will decompose if not eaten. New tails are smooth unlike the original tail which is spikey.