Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836) is a animal in the Gekkonidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836) (Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836))
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Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836)

Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836)

Schlegel's Japanese gecko (Gekko japonicus) is an insect-eating gecko species found in East Asia that can autotomize its tail to escape predators.

Family
Genus
Gekko
Order
Class
Squamata

About Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836)

Schlegel's Japanese gecko, scientifically named Gekko japonicus (Schlegel, 1836), is called yamori in Japanese. It is a species of gecko. Gekko japonicus is distributed across the main islands of Japan, ranging from northern Honshu in the north and east to Kyushu in the south and west. It can also be found in eastern China and South Korea. Like other gecko species, individual G. japonicus primarily feed on insects. This species is capable of autotomy, meaning it will detach its tail from its body to escape predators. This process does not cause bleeding, because blood vessels at the base of the tail close to prevent blood loss. However, the gecko loses a stored supply of fat tissue that it uses during periods of food scarcity.

Photo: (c) Kim, Hyun-tae, all rights reserved, uploaded by Kim, Hyun-tae

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Squamata Gekkonidae Gekko

More from Gekkonidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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