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Gallotia stehlini

Nino Feb 22, 2008 04:53 AM

Although I've been keeping (and, on several occasions, breeding) this magnificent species for years, informations on captive care I managed to gather during that period are quite scarce. I haven't been able to find any books on terrarium keeping of this species, so I rely mostly on experience I have with some other Lacertids in my collection, aswell as several scientific papers on natural history, feeding habits in the wild, climate conditions on Gran Canaria island, etc. Also, there seems to be very little sound information on keeping and breeding on the internet.
Since lizards in my collection thrive and even breed, I guess keeping conditions are at least "optimal", but I like to learn as much about animals in my care as possible. Therefore, I'd like to share infos with other keepers, and possibly improve keeping conditions.
I keep my animals in spacious terrariums (200x80x90cm, 150x60x60cm, and 100x50x50cm for youngsters) decorated in mediteranean stile (sandy loam and gravel substrate, plenty of rocks and branches, some shrubs) illuminated by HQI lamps (Ingo hooked me on those ), and heat gradient is created from 45C on the "hot spot" to 25C on the cool end where artificial caves and burrows always containing certain degree of moisture are situated. Photoperiod ranges from 14/8 in the peek of the summer to 10/14 in the middle of the winter. During the winter all heating elements are switched off and animals are kept on lower temperatures (20-23C during the day and 15-18C during the night)for two months.
As for food, I try to stick with "natural" as much as possible: animal part of diet consists mostly of insects (predominantly B. dubia roaches, G. assimilis crickets and Zophobas worms, suplemented with some wild caught insects, arachnids and snails during the season), while plant material is provided in form of various ripe fruits (bananas, grape, various berries, peach, apple, pears, etc), flowers (especialy dandelion), and tender leaves (dandelion, clover, plantain). All foods are suplemented with high-quality vitamin/mineral powder periodically.
Recently I got some info from a fellow Czech hobbyst that he feeds his animals with yogurt (regular and fruit yogurt), boiled rice and noodles, and fish (small minnows), along with usual insects/fruit fare.
I'd really like to hear from any of you who have any experience with this unique lizards (John C, Ingo) in order to improve keeping conditions as much as possible.

Thank you all in advance!

Regards
Nino

Replies (4)

CobraKing Mar 13, 2008 09:31 PM

Thanks for the info, G. stehlini is one of my favorite lacertids! I know this species is very rare in captivity, are any available in the US (I'm sure at a very hight price)?

John-C Mar 18, 2008 04:39 PM

Hello Nino,
Been busy with post brumation, courting, breeding and
you name it ... lol.

Your husbandry on the stehlini is good. Mine differs only
slightly in most cases. Your temps (cage gradients) are a
bit higher as is your photo period somewhat longer.
They get two months cool down starting on Thanksgiving.

I can easily keep an adult pair in a 48x27x18 inch vision
cage. I keep them on sand with a few rocks, a low/heavy
grapevine branch to climb on or nap/sleep under, a good
size hide and a few UVB fluor lamps for cage lighting with
a 100w merc vapor basking light.

I feed a greens, veggies, ground turkey, tofu, fresh flowers
and yellow squash salad mix. This is topped with a few small
pieces of various fruit. Banana being their favorite. They also
get insects only as an occasional treat and a small amount of
banana/strawberry flavored light yogurt but not too often. It's
really fun to watch them gather round and lick it up. A small
bowl of fresh water is kept in their cage year round.
Miner-all (I) is my calc/vit of choice.

This pair is just now beginning to court so chances are there
will be some breeding in the next few weeks. This pair had
produced two clutches last season so I look for them to do
the same this year.

Note:
Hatchling and juveniles tend to eat more insects than the
salad early on.

John

Nino Mar 22, 2008 04:17 AM

Thank you for your answers.

Hey, John, that's a great-looking male you have! He is really big and I expect he's at least 10 years old.
Btw I've read that 20-25 years is realistic life expectancy for this species, and specimens of over 50 years old are not unknown.

Here's my bigest male (age uncertain, for he was purchased as an adult 4 years ago):
Image

imurfreakman101 May 18, 2008 06:13 PM

yes nino i have a gallotia stehlini lizard i was wondering where do i get hqi lamps and are they same for him , and what kind do i get thanks

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