I have never had eggs before, so this is my first attempt at it. I noticed this green growth on 1 of my eggs. These were laid in the beginning of October. I am assuming it might be mold? The egg itself looks healthy though. Should it move it to a separate container so it does not infect the...
I am in Florida, he goes outside (I have cages that stay outside) from about 9am-2pm. He is outside in the last pics :) defiantly want to get some wax worms for him though. The ones locally are TINY.
You and me both.....lol I My regular Nintendo finally quit working though :( Felt like there was a death in the family lol Oh well the super is still kicking, although it requires a little TLC to get it working sometimes.
I have mine all in the living room. I also have 3 cats, a big dog, and worst of all a bunch of loud obnoxious kids. Seriously it doesn't seem to phase any of them.
I like all reptiles :) Monitors, iguanas and chameleons are my favorite though.
I also have poison dart frogs, a horse, dog, cats, ect. Oh and kids, they are pretty much lumped into a "animal" category, but listen less and smell slightly worse....gotta love them though :P
Today :) Looks like his "fat pads" are starting to come back. :D I have also given him a name, Stitch :p (from Lilo & Stitch)
His cage. (The left is empty)
How old should a chameleon be before I can put him in a 2x2x4~(maybe 5') cage? I have a big setup with two cages, all hooked up to a mist king. I will like to get my younger one is there as soon as possible.
Definatly getting fatter, but still not getting those amazing colors he had before. Instead of getting bright when he sleeps he gets very pale....I find that strange.
No i defiantly think it is a great study, and the best one I have seen. I just meant that it would be more accurate and even more interesting to have the same study done in their natural habitat.
Good point. I do have to point out though that chameleons in Hawaii are 100% invasive and anything they eat in the "wild" there can not scientifically represent what they would eat in their natural habitat. Studies about chameleon diet in their natural habitat would be very interesting though.
It is interesting to me. Snakes and monitors rarely need "dusting" and "gutloading" because they eat whole prey. They get all the nutrients they need from the bones, organs, ect I do know that excess protein in chams, and iguanas can cause the liver to have issues..Most of these studies have...