beardeds7587
New Member
i was wondering if they can i dnt think so but i want others thoughts ..i knw most reptiles can ..thanks for ur input 
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Dripper and mist few times a day for few minutes each and you're good to go.. place the Dripper in a spot that allows it to drip through as many leaves as possible.
i was wondering if they can i dnt think so but i want others thoughts ..i knw most reptiles can ..thanks for ur input![]()
Are you sure? I remember reading a thread a few months ago that explained their skin can absorb water in very minuscule amounts.No. Their skin is designed to repel water.
I don't have any evidence or data, but I have a hunch that some chams can absorb water through their lungs.
I think it's more that they lose water more slowly through their lungs in higher humidity rather than actually gaining water from the air.I have read that as well. So many chams become dehydrated despite extra attempts at watering when the humidity is too low. And seeing this happen for myself leads me to believe that they acquire a significant portion of their fluids from the humidity.
I think it's more that they lose water more slowly through their lungs in higher humidity rather than actually gaining water from the air.
Woah, I can't read that sentence all at once.Actually cpap pushes fluid out of the way via positive pressure, to get oxygen passed the fluids and into the alveoli.. cpap is a temp fix as they would then need nitroglycerin to vasodilate blood vessels to allow extra lung fluid into the blood stream, then a diuretic to then urinate and remove the excess fluid... just an FYI!
LOL no I don't mean it that way, I am just not up to date with that sort of terminology. I had to use a dictionary...Lol sorry.. I was never one good with words![]()
Actually cpap pushes fluid out of the way via positive pressure, to get oxygen passed the fluids and into the alveoli.. cpap is a temp fix as they would then need nitroglycerin to vasodilate blood vessels to allow extra lung fluid into the blood stream, then a diuretic to then urinate and remove the excess fluid... just an FYI!