White Wall
White wall is a descriptive crested gecko morph label for animals with a strong pale lateral pattern, usually cream to white, running along the sides of the body. It is seen in Correlophus ciliatus, the New Caledonian crested gecko, and is often layered over harlequin, extreme harlequin, flame, pinstripe, or dark-base lines. The look is judged by contrast, coverage, and how cleanly the pale side color separates from the darker base, rather than by a single universally recognized gene.
Care is the same as for other crested geckos: an arboreal enclosure with climbing cover, moderate humidity cycles, and temperatures that avoid sustained heat. Most keepers feed a complete crested gecko diet with occasional appropriately sized insects. Buyers should look at fired-up and fired-down photos because white wall contrast changes with mood, lighting, and age. Breeders pairing for the trait usually keep photo records of parents and offspring, since the label is based on visible expression and line quality.
Colors: Axanthic, Bicolor, Brindle, Cappuccino, Cream, Cream-On-Cream, Dalmatian, Dark, Dashed Pinstripe, Empty Back, Extreme Harlequin, Flame, Harlequin, Lavender, Lily White, Moonglow, Orange, Partial Pinstripe, Patternless, Phantom, Pinstripe, Porthole, Red, Sable, Super Dalmatian, Tiger, Tricolor, White Wall, Yellow