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Encyclopedia Britannica



GECKO

This article appears in Volume V11, Page 547 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GAG-GEO
GECKO ,1 the common name applied to all the species of the Geckones, one of the three sub-orders of the Lacertilia. The geckoes are small creatures, seldom exceeding 8 in. in length including the tail. With the head considerably flattened, the
body
  short and thick, the legs not high enough to prevent the
body
  dragging somewhat on the ground,the eyes large and almost destitute of eyelids, and the tail short and in some cases nearly as thick as the body, the geckoes altogether lack the litheness and grace characteristic of most lizards. Their colours also are dull,
Leaf-tailed Gecko (Gymnodactylus platurus) of Australia.
and to the weird and forbidding aspect thus produced the general prejudice against those creatures in the countries where they occur, which has led to their being classed with toads and
snakes
 , is no doubt to be attributed. Their bite was supposed to be venomous, and their saliva to produce painful cutaneous eruptions; even their
touch
  was thought sufficient to convey a dangerous taint. It is needless to say that in this instance the popular mind was misled by appearances. The geckoes are not only harmless, but are exceedingly useful creatures, feeding on insects, which, owing to the great width of their oesophagus, they are enabled to swallow whole, and in pursuit of which they do not hesitate to enter human dwellings, where they are often killed on
' The Malay name ge-koq imitates the animal's cry.
suspicion. The structure of the toes in these lizards forms one of their most characteristic anatomical features.
Most geckoes have adhesive digits and toes, by means of which
they are enabled not only to climb absolutely smooth and vertical
surfaces, for instance a window-pane, but to run along a white-
washed ceiling, back downwards. The adhesion is not produced
by sticky matter but by numerous transverse lamellae, each
of which is further beset with tiny
hair
 -like excrescences. The
arrangement of the lamellae and pads differs much in the various
genera and is used for classificactory purposes. Those which
live on sandy ground have narrow digits without the adhesive
apparatus. Most species have
sharp
 , curved claws, often
retractile between some of the
lamellae or into a
special
 
sheath. The tail is very brittle
and can be quickly regener-
ated; it varies much in size
and shape; the most extra-
ordinary
  is that of the leaf-
tailed gecko. Ptychozoon homalocephalon of the Malay
countries has membranous ex-
pansions on the sides of the
head, body, limbs and tail, which
look like parachutes, but more
probably they aid in conceal-
ing the creature when it is
closely pressed to the similarly coloured bark of a tree. Most geckoes are dull coloured, yellow to brown, and they soon
change
  colour from lighter to dark tints. They are insectivorous and chiefly nocturnal, but are fond of basking in the sun, motionless on the bark of a tree, or on a rock the colour of which is then imitated to a nicety. Some species are more or less transparent.
Geckoes, of which about 270 species are known, subdivided into about 50 genera, are cosmopolitan within the warmer zones, including New Zealand, and even the remotest volcanic islands. This wide distribution is due partly to the great age of the suborder (although fossils are unknown), partly to their being able to exist for several months without food so that, concealed in hollow trunks of trees, they may float about for a very long time. Ships, also, act as distributors. In south Europe occur only Hemidactylus turcicus, Tarentola mauritanica (Platydactylus facetanus) and Phyllodactylus europaeus.


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