Jackson has a white spot with black around it. help.

herpderp

New Member
so i got a Jackson chameleon and have had him for about a month, he is doing great, i feed him everyday, have a fogger to keep the humidity up, a red night light a basking light, he has a UV bar. he is always a bright green unless i clean the cage, then he changes to a patern of green and brown with yellow. eats normally, moves around, doesn't seem ill in the slightest, but this morning i noticed he has a white spot about the size of a pecil whole, surrounded by black. i can't see any cuts or wounds, he hasn't fallen that i know of. im thinking it may be a fungus. any help would be great.
 
i can not post a picture at the moment. but its a creamish colour spot, and it just got there like today.
 
A picture would help others identify what it might be. As previously suggested you need to remove the night light. Chameleons can detect light at night even red and it will disturb their sleep. Also they need a drop in temp at night to slow their metabolism. Jacksons can go down pretty low at night, even in to the 50`s. I drop my room down to the mid 60`s at night.
 
i attached a photo where you can see the spot.
 

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note, his eye is not always skwinted like that ahaha, the flash went off so he kinda freaked out a bit.
 
It appears to be a burn.

Can you elaborate on the placement of his basking light? What bulb are you using?

Jacksons do not need a hot basking spot, ideally it should be around 82 degrees, and can usually be acheived with a low wattage house bulb (incandescent).

Put some ploysporin or neosporin on the spot and make a vet appointment.
 
i cant imagine he could burn himself unless the frame gets hotter then i thought it did, i have a lamp on top of the cage, the top is glass because i was having problems with crickets climbing up there where he could burn his tounge. but ill put some neosporin on it. ill make sure not to use a pain releiving kind. and ill move the lamp away.
 
If you could post a picture of your setup that may help.

Does the light filter through the glass? Glass will block all UVB (not related to the burn). I wonder if it could also intesify the heat from the basking bulb similiar to how a magnifying glass does.
 
It is probably worth a trip to the vet, but I am sure your cham will make a full recovery. You will probably need to apply neosporin for a couple weeks to prevent any infection, then it will take a couple sheds before the discoloration goes away.

I had a cham get a burn once from a new basking bulb and it looked just like that.
 
ok, but its not like i should be speeding down the rode doing cham cpr? ahahaha, this is my first Chameleon, i have a few geckos and snakes and a water dragon, but never one of these guys.
 
it does look like an early thermal burn, although i don’t know how it could be so pinpoint unless it’s just in the early stages, there was contact with just that one spot, or someone had too much fun with an Arctic Spyder laser pointer.

typically the area would dry out +/- slough in the next week. it does not look fungal at this point but that can change. i would definitely hit it up with straight neosporin and keep us advised, since it’s possible to grow in size or worsen. and of course of you’re seeing it worsen, to the vet you go.
 
thats what i was thinking, how did a burn get pin pointed like that, is t possible the glass made a sort od laser like a magnafying glass does?
 
If you could post a picture of your setup that may help.

Does the light filter through the glass? Glass will block all UVB (not related to the burn). I wonder if it could also intesify the heat from the basking bulb similiar to how a magnifying glass does.

I am also wondering about your glass top. Glass will block UV.
 
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