Alright, guys. I'm satisfied with 1) the case of the Hawaiian xantholophus, 2) the absence of natural selection in captive breeding, and 3) the potentially insufficient nutrition etc. in captive husbandry, as three very strong explanations for the dearth of generations past F5. Thank you all...
Sorry if it wasn't clear. Yes, my question is general because A. Abate's reported opinion was that chameleons are not viable past the fourth or fifth captive generation--generally. I took her to mean that any captive population is unsustainable without diversifying its gene pool, e.g. through...
I read here that Ardith Abate wasn't so hopeful. Although this only constitutes a curiosity for me, I hope the silence on this thread doesn't mean she was right!
Trace, I'm glad you elaborated. Thank you! And that data is exactly what I'm looking for. Thanks for the feeding data, too. I would love to see more of this type of information, from you and any keeper who's willing to plot it out. I know it's tedious, so I greatly appreciate the effort...
You're not the first to review them with such enthusiasm, Trace. Too bad they're not around anymore, eh? Any idea what that 2005 company was called? Thanks for replying,
-S
Hello everyone,
I'm interested in the different methods keepers employ in dealing with escaped feeder insects, especially noisy crickets. I suspect many probably just "deal with it," but if you can testify to minimization efforts or successful prevention, please chime in.
Thanks,
S
Hello everyone,
Does anybody know what happened to Susan Donoghue and Walkabout Farm? They were still in business before I stopped frequenting the online chameleon world, and it seemed their products were primo.
Thanks,
S
Thacarter,
You like Lil Wayne, eh? I've only really heard the song "Kush" from the Leak EP, but I can't stop listening to it. My coworkers are threatening an intervention.
It's great you're thinking about working with chameleons--I am too. It's even greater that you found these forums...