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Three things you don't talk about here...
Religion, Politics and... Panther crossing
Some people do cross, but it can be a real touchy subject.
I honestly would never buy a cross-locale unless it's got a percentage and lineage that can be traced. That's doing it right. The thing with locales in the wild you may be told this species is this locale, because of where it is picked up, unless you get it's DNA tested (from what I understand about DNA testing with locales) there is no 100% way to know this animal is a pureline. Sorry but chams can cross into other territories, it may be rare, but totally possible. I would not be surprised if over half the animals we think are one locale are either a completely different one or a mix.
I honestly don't care much either. If we aren't putting them out in the wild to repopulate then why does it really matter? It's kind of like purebred dogs? If people are using it for specific scientific breeding or whatever, then they won't question doing DNA testing. but that's just me. I personally like being surprised by my chams colors.
Damn this topic is one of the ones I like so much I can't avoid answering when I should be focusing on other things
Well if we are talking about Panther chameleons, all panthers from what I know are from Madagascar, now though it may be a huge forest in relation to a single chameleon it is not huge to a large amount of chameleons. There will be cross overs and I would not be surprised if there are more mixes than you are aware. They are only found in northern and the eastern biomes of madagascar, with a select few locales found on a smaller two islands off the coast of the main island of madagascar, it's easy for a tree limb or even a tree itself to fall into a river or if it was overhanging a cliff into the ocean, and they could honestly survive long enough to hit a new territory. It's happened with animals all the time, with animals it shouldn't have happened with. The ocean is a bit different as far as boundaries since the fish you mention above are specifically reef fish and most of the ocean is open and they would never leave it. Most of Madagascar is forest, especially in the biomes I mentioned.