Calvary Exotics — Care Sheet

Viper
Gecko

Hemidactylus imbricatus — Husbandry Guide

Begin setup

Needed Items Checklist

Gather everything below before your gecko arrives. Tap each card to check it off as you go.

Tank 20"L x 10"W --or-- 30"L x 12"W
Substrate Sand, soil, moss & leaf litter
Background Cork bark panel --or-- DIY background
Feeder Dish Escape-proof design
Water Dish Shallow, easy to exit
Feeder Tongs Feeding utensil
Bark / Hides Cork bark/bark pieces & slabs
UVB Lamp Arcadia Shade Dweller --or-- Jungle Dawn
Heat Lamp Zoo Med 35W Nano Halogen
Thermostat For heat lamp control
Spray Bottle Fine-mist, for background
Calcium Supplement With or without D3

Tap a card to mark it as gathered

Hemidactylus imbricatus

Pakistan / India Nocturnal Communal Arid / Semi-Arid Insectivore

The Viper Gecko (Hemidactylus imbricatus) is a compact, strikingly patterned gecko native to the arid and semi-arid scrublands of Pakistan and northwestern India. In the wild they occupy rocky outcrops, dry riverbeds, and loose-stone hillsides — squeezing into tight crevices beneath boulders and bark during the day.

They are strictly nocturnal, emerging after dark to hunt small insects across the rock face. During daylight hours they rest deep in rocky fissures and bark hides, where residual ground humidity keeps humidity just above ambient levels. This behavior is the blueprint for their captive enclosure.

Viper Geckos are highly communal and do well in small same-sex or mixed groups when space and hides are sufficient. Males can be territorial with one another, so groups of one male with multiple females — or all-female groups — work best. Their bold banded patterning and curious, animated foraging make them one of the most engaging micro-geckos in the hobby.

Viper Gecko on rock Hemidactylus imbricatus — typical resting posture.
Native Range Pakistan & NW India — rocky semi-arid scrubland
Activity Window Nocturnal — active after dark
Social Behavior Communal — Thrives in groups

The Enclosure

Viper Geckos are rock-crevice specialists. Dense, tight hides along a vertical cork background are essential — open space makes them feel exposed and stressed.

Juvenile Group (2–3)

Length20"
Width10"
Height12"
BrandThrive

Adult Group (2–4)

Length30"
Width12"
Height12"
BrandThrive
Vertical Background Cork bark wall, full height, packed with cavities and nooks. Moss added to nooks.
Substrate Layering Recommended to have bio-active mixed substrate with a drainage layer. Add a layer of sand to the top keeping the portions along the back wall exposed for localized humidity.
Avoid Coconut hides. Coconut fiber substrate. Enclosed plastic decor/hides.
Naturalistic terrarium setup with cork bark Cork bark vertical background with nook hides & moss
Bioactive substrate layers Exposed mixed substrate with moss along the back panel

Light Like the Canopy Edge

Though nocturnal, Viper Geckos benefit from low-level UVB exposure. They absorb incidental UV through crevice openings in the wild — provide it without intensity.

UVB / Full Spectrum Arcadia Shade Dweller Low-output UVB is ideal to simulate indirect light and reduce the risk of metabolic bone disease.
Basking / Heat Zoo Med 35W Nano Halogen w/ Thermostat 35w Nano Halogen is recommend for smaller enclosures. Make sure a thermostat and probe are used to maintain temperatures within range.
Lamp Placement Place the lighting element along the top of the back panel. Provide a wide heat gradient for thermoregulation.
Day-Night Cycle During the day Vipers will lounge along the background panel surfaces in nooks soaking up UV as they rest. At dusk, they will begin to hunt and remain active throughout the night. Make sure they get complete lights out during their night cycle for optimal health.
Dappled forest canopy light 5-7% UVB replicates the natural indirect light Vipers experience while day-lounging in nature.

Vertical Thermal Gradient

Viper Geckos rely on thermoregulation. Maintain a clear hot-to-cool gradient along the the background.

95°F
Hot Spot Peak
75°F
Cool Side
68°F
Nighttime Low
Cool zone — 75°F Mid background — 80°F Hot spot — 90–95°F

The hot spot (90–95°F) sits at the top of the cork background, directly under the heat lamp. Geckos will climb up to digest and thermoregulate, then descend to cooler zones to rest. The cool side of the tank floor should not exceed 75°F.

At night, allow temperatures to fall to room temperature — 68–72°F is ideal. Viper Geckos are naturally adapted to significant day/night temperature swings in their native Pakistan. This drop triggers natural activity, feeding, and breeding behavior. Never heat overnight.

Close-up of gecko on warm rock Wide gradient against the vertical background provides plenty of options for thermoregulation.

Dry Tank, Wet Micro-Zones

Maintain a dry, well-ventilated main chamber with localized humidity inside hides, mimicking the damp pockets of deep rocky crevices.

Tank Ambient
30–40%
Cork Background
40–65%
Nook Interiors
75–90%
Nighttime Spike
60–80%
Misting Technique Mist the vertical back wall and hide entrances lightly each evening or morning. Let the water wick into the soil/moss layer and raising humidity inside hides simulating the cool, damp pockets of rock crevices.
Why This Matters Viper Geckos sip droplets surfaces and rely on humid hides for clean sheds. Maintain low ambient humidity as sustained high humidity leads to respiratory infections and bacterial substrate breakdown.
Moss and water droplets on bark Moss-backed hides retain localized moisture — dry sandy substrate with pockets of humidity.

What They Eat

Viper Geckos are enthusiastic, active hunters. Feed after lights out when they are naturally alert and ready to chase prey.

Preferred Crickets Excellent trigger for hunting instinct. Gut-load before feeding. Limit as a primary staple.
Preferred Isopods Great supplemental feeder. Can free-roam as a cleanup crew in bioactive setups.
Preferred Dubia Nymphs Excellent protein-to-fat ratio. Easy to culture. A true staple feeder.
Preferred Discoid Nymphs Similar to dubias but legal in more states. Ideal roach option where dubias are restricted.
Preferred Silkworms High in protein and moisture. Excellent for hydration and variety.
Preferred Hornworms High moisture, soft body. Great treat for picky eaters or sick geckos needing hydration.
Preferred Buffalo Beetles / Larvae Excellent soft-bodied feeder. No chitin shell — easy to digest. Highly nutritious.
Occasional Small Mealworms High fat, hard chitin. Treat only — never as a staple. Can cause impaction if overfed.
Occasional Small Superworms Richer than mealworms. Use sparingly as an enrichment feeder only.
Supplementation Dust feeders with calcium (with D3) 2× per week and a multivitamin once per week. Rotate between calcium with and without D3 if using proper UVB lighting.
Feeding Schedule Feed 3–4 appropriately-sized prey items per gecko, every 2–3 days. Feed in the evening when geckos are naturally active.

Troubleshooting Guide

Viper Geckos are hardy when husbandry is dialled in. Most issues trace back to humidity imbalance, inadequate hides, or incorrect temps — fix the environment before assuming illness.

Monitor Retained Shed (Dysecdysis)

Stuck shed around toes or tail tip is the most common issue. Chronic low humidity during shed cycle is the culprit. Toes with stuck shed can lose circulation quickly.

Increase background misting frequency; add a humid moss hide.
Monitor Refusal to Eat

Newly acquired geckos may not eat for 1–2 weeks. Stress from transport, an exposed tank, or incorrect temperatures are the most common causes. Breeding season can also suppress appetite.

Reduce disturbance, confirm hot-spot temp, offer different feeder variety.
Caution Tail Autotomy (Dropped Tail)

Viper Geckos will drop their tail when stressed or handled roughly. The tail regrows but with a different texture and pattern. Keep the wound site clean and dry to prevent infection.

Keep substrate dry and clean; isolate briefly if tankmates are curious.
Caution Aggression Within Group

Males can fight when housed together. Females may squabble over hide spots. Colonies will fight if food is scarce.

Add more nooks, increase the size of the tank, add more basking areas, increase food supply.
Caution Metabolic Bone Disease (MBD)

Soft limbs, bowed legs, tremors, or difficulty climbing are red flags. Caused by chronic calcium deficiency or inadequate UVB exposure. Progresses quickly in small species.

Verify UVB output (replace bulbs every 6–12 months); dust feeders consistently.
Urgent Respiratory Infection

Wheezing, open-mouth breathing, or mucus around the nostrils indicates a respiratory infection. Usually caused by ambient humidity staying too high for too long without proper drying periods.

Veterinary care required. In the meantime improve ventilation and reduce ambient RH.
Urgent Egg Binding (Dystocia)

Gravid females need a deep, slightly moist laying site (soil/moss mix). A female that appears bloated, is straining without producing eggs, or becomes lethargic near her expected laying date may be egg-bound — a genuine emergency in small species.

Provide a deep moist egg-laying area and consult a reptile vet immediately.
Monitor Weight Loss / Lethargy

Viper Geckos carry slight body bulk through the trunk when well-fed. Sunken flanks, visible hip bones, or a thinning tail base paired with lethargy may indicate parasites, inadequate temps, or internal illness.

Fecal float test with a reptile vet; review feeding frequency and feeder nutrition.