BlooHiss
New member
I would never stick it in the fridge without it being in a sealed baggie first, lol! Thought that was obvious, I should have mentioned. 
What I mean by check his collection is... how is this transmitted? Are the geckos a secondary host? Primary? Did they come from the gut of feeders? Do they even shed in the feces or do they complete their life cycle some other way? We don't know, do we? We don't know how it is spread or what it is or how the reptile was infected.
If someone is going to post an informative post regarding a disease or parasite it should be followed up and not half way done, IMO. While it's obvious the gecko was infected, we don't know by what or how it was acquired. What if this parasite doesn't normally take a gecko host and there is no real probability that it can spread to others housed in the same cage or within quarantine?
We'll never know. Either do a necropsy at home and be prepared to harden yourself for the reality of sending it out upon discovering something odd or leave it for the vet to do.
What I mean by check his collection is... how is this transmitted? Are the geckos a secondary host? Primary? Did they come from the gut of feeders? Do they even shed in the feces or do they complete their life cycle some other way? We don't know, do we? We don't know how it is spread or what it is or how the reptile was infected.
If someone is going to post an informative post regarding a disease or parasite it should be followed up and not half way done, IMO. While it's obvious the gecko was infected, we don't know by what or how it was acquired. What if this parasite doesn't normally take a gecko host and there is no real probability that it can spread to others housed in the same cage or within quarantine?
We'll never know. Either do a necropsy at home and be prepared to harden yourself for the reality of sending it out upon discovering something odd or leave it for the vet to do.