just trying to make it easier to find all the information needed about different reptiles in one spot (i hate having to surf all diff websites on 56k to try finding good information), so i'm trying to make sheets on the care and breeding of things like leopard geckos, AFT geckos, ball pythons, argentine B&W tegus, ackie monitors, dumeril's monitors, mali and niger uromastyx, different chameleons, blue tongued skinks, and bearded and frilled dragons. if anyone could help me with any of these, or point out errors to improve this leo one, please do... 
thanks
Care and Breeding of:
Leopard Gecko
(Eublepharis Macularius)
Size: Females average 9-10 inches long, while males can reach 11 .
Housing: A 10 gallon aquarium is big enough to house 1-2 geckos, given you provide enough hiding spots. A 20 gallon aquarium is needed for 3.
You should provide something for them to hide in/under on both sides of the enclosure, and keep 1 moist.
Heating: A heat pad or lamp should be used to provide a basking spot of 88-90 degrees, with about 80 degrees on the cool end. Do not use heat rocks, they can short out and burn your lizard. I use red light bulbs since leopard geckos are nocturnal.
Substrate: The safest substrate would be paper towels; however, sand, reptile carpets, and bark substrates are also used. Sand can be very dangerous for geckos under 6 months of age when accidentally ingested and can cause impaction.
Feeding: They need a diet of mainly crickets and/or mealworms (no bigger than 2/3 size of the gecko’s head), and can be fed a few wax worms occasionally as a treat. Adults can even eat pinkie mice occasionally, especially important with breeding females. They should be fed every day and supplemented with a calcium/D3 powder every day and a multivitamin once a week, I use Rep-Cal’s Phosphorus-Free Calcium with Vitamin D3, and Rep-Cal’s Herptivite multivitamin. They should also have a shallow dish for water which should be kept fresh every day. It is also important to supply them with a shallow dish for a calcium powder, and they will lick it when they need to. I use Rep-Cal’s Calcium with No Phosphorus-No Vitamin D3, that is important.
Incubation: Leopard geckos lay clutches of 2 eggs at a time, and up to 3 clutches per year. After the eggs are laid you should carefully place them in small containers of moist vermiculite with a 4:1 vermiculite to water ratio, with a few small air holes. The eggs should be buried halfway into the vermiculite, and temperature ranging from 80-90 degrees. Because leopard geckos are temperature sexed during the first 2 weeks of incubation, temperatures in the low 80s should give you females, where high 80s should be males, or just 85 degrees for a chance at both.
Hatchlings: Hatchlings should be kept on paper towels, and will not eat until after their first shed. They will need to be fed pinhead crickets or very small mealworms. It is important to supplement their food every day.




