Unlike other lizards, geckos have vocal cords, which allow them to make a variety of sounds, including barks, chirps, and clicks.
Geckos can stick to surfaces because their bulbous toes are covered in hundreds of tiny microscopic hairs called setae. Each seta splits off into hundreds of even smaller bristles called spatulae, which get so close to the contours in walls and ceilings that the van der Waals force kicks in. This type of physical bond happens when electrons from the gecko hair molecules and electrons from the wall molecules interact with each other and create an electromagnetic attraction.
Geckos have excellent night vision. Their color vision in low light is 350 times more sensitive than human color vision.
Tokay Geckos are large, can consume a lot of prey, and thrive in man-made environments, so they are sometimes utilized for the control of insects such as cockroaches that are considered pests. In some East Asian countries, they are even attributed with supernatural powers and believed to be descended from dragons.
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