The Gecko Queen
Certain small lizards have captured this woman's heart
By Bruce Morgan
She was a girl who always loved animals, and was prone to
rescuing wild animals that she found wandering near her home in suburban
Michigan. But it wasn't until college when a friend managing a
pet shop introduced her to geckos that she found her one true love.
Docile, easy to care for and generally sociable, the beguiling lizards that
would sit bug-eyed in the palm of her hand had lots to recommend
them. "I think they're neat," says Kati Wrubel, in true Midwestern form.
Ten years later, at age 30, she's a researcher with a doctorate in
behavioral neuroscience who runs a gecko-selling business on the side.
Her life is fractured in a good way. Wrubel divides her time between the
Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, where she assists Louis Shuster, professor
emeritus of pharmacology, biochemistry and neuroscience; and the Cummings School of Veterinary
Medicine, where she works with Nicholas Dodman and Alice Moon-Fanelli, professors
of clinical sciences. In her spare time, Wrubel maintains a colorful website
(www.katiscresteds.com) to market her carefully bred and raised lizards to discriminating
buyers everywhere. Every other month, she and her 11-year-old daughter, Eve, travel to pet
shows around the northeastern United States to sell their animals in person.
People in the lizard business are mostly male. Wrubel describes typical vendors at lizard
shows as a bunch of guys in camouflage hats standing with their arms crossed, primed to
display their 12-foot-long snakes. Now picture this winsome brunette and her daughter
plunked down at a table in the same huge hall, smiling at you. It's a contrast worth savoring.
Generally speaking, Wrubel is not much on attitude. "I pride myself on customer service
and approachability," she says. "I try to keep it fun."
In fact, geckos make good pets. They don't bark at night or scratch the furniture. Tropical,
arboreal creatures, geckos can live for 15 or 20 years. Certain species are aggressive,
capable of screaming and biting a person's hand when alarmed, and then refusing to let go.
But hers are the gentler sort, companionable and sweet-tempered, she maintains. And they
are easy to keep. Although some species require extra heat and special ultraviolet lighting
to stay healthy,Wrubel's geckos tend to be low-maintenance. They do well at room temperature
on a modest diet of Gerber's baby food (in flavors of peach, banana, mango, apricot)
and crickets.
A visit to Wrubel's website shows the geckos to be speckled and colorful, sporting huge
eyes, oversized feet and a weird, almost prehistoric look. (If dinosaurs could fit in your
hand, they would be something like this.) Many appear playful, and a few exhibit ear-toear
grins, like frat boys ready to party. Obviously, geckos are not a wise choice for everyone.
"They appeal to people who kind of want something different," says Wrubel.
Her business specializes in two kinds of gecko, cresteds and gargoyles, with the former
species dominating the array. Cresteds have a bit of saucy fringe on top, resembling a
teenager's Mohawk. These geckos were thought to be extinct until they were discovered in
New Caledonia, an island east of Australia, in 1994. Wrubel has recently joined forces with
Joerg Mayer, a veterinarian and professor at the Foster Hospital for Small Animals at the
Cummings School, to study crested husbandry in depth through blood work and analysis.
"We don't really know if we're caring for them properly, in terms of what we feed them
or how we treat them,"Wrubel says about crested geckos. "They're a new species, after all.
They've only been in this country for 13 years. Are we doing exactly what's best for them?
Using my colony, Joerg and his colleagues will look and see." (TM)