stickenstein
Established Member
This morning we noticed this pretty gross looking film on our panther chameleon’s branch. He doesn’t seem ill and his behavior is normal. Should we be worried?
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Thank you, glad to be here!Hi there welcome to the forum... Are you finding fecal or left over urate directly below that branch? Reason I am asking is sometimes if they are really well hydrated the urate will come out more like egg whites instead of having a form to it.
Ok so solid and orange indicates dehydration. I wonder is he actually might have thrown up a bit.Thank you, glad to be here!
I didn’t find anything directly under it. I was thinking it may have been something like that but his urates are usually solid and he’s had no diet changes. Last urate was approx. 2 days ago and it was large and solid.
Sorry forgot to hit reply on that!Ok so solid and orange indicates dehydration. I wonder is he actually might have thrown up a bit.
If you do a husbandry review we can then look at everything and provide feedback effectively. Let me know if you would like me to post the info for that.
Thanks for the sweet words and the warm welcome! I realized I kind of derailed my own thread with the tangent into Frank’s situation so if it’s better for me to make a different thread with a specific request for his help then let me know! There hasn’t been any more of Stick’s mystery film and he seems to be fine so I guess I should focus on asking the community for input on Frank now.Just want to say hello and welcome and bless you for taking in a chameleon you knew was going to be sick and expensive to get back into good shape. We need more people like you in the world.![]()
Personally I would start a new thread for Frank - it'll be easier to keep up with what is going on with him when contained to one thread, and for folks searching through the threads in the future with perhaps the same issues will find the discussion easier to follow.Thanks for the sweet words and the warm welcome! I realized I kind of derailed my own thread with the tangent into Frank’s situation so if it’s better for me to make a different thread with a specific request for his help then let me know! There hasn’t been any more of Stick’s mystery film and he seems to be fine so I guess I should focus on asking the community for input on Frank now.
Ok so again see my feedback in red bold. And I will be repeating some info here.Thank you for including them all in one. Since so much of your stuff is the same it makes it so that I do not have to repeat myself lol. These reviews can take a bit of time so you saved me some there.
Let me know what questions you have.
History
• STICK: Impulse purchase from a local reptile store, he seemed really friendly for a lizard and I was smitten. He has been doing well other than a spinal scar from a burn when I upgraded the wattage of his heat lamp and had a branch too close to it. I cringe every time I see it (I know it’s a rookie mistake) but he’s doing well now and it’s healed over so I’m hoping it’s just cosmetic. Ok so with the burn scar he may have issues shedding. Just make sure the shed is not building up in an area. I would put in a gauge with a probe at the basking area just so you know exactly where your basking temp is sitting. This is more preventative than anything. I happen to use a herpstat thermostat for basking. it is a total game changer in my opinion. Probe is placed at the branch and I set the basking temp to be no hotter than 82 then where they rise up they are in the max 85. But the fixture will dim up or down based on the temp. So it takes the worry out of basking temps. I would get a fecal for this boy just because you have not and he was purchased at a reptile store. Also you have two so you do not want to cross contaminate in case of parasite issue. Also most parasites do not show outward issues. But a stress even or high numbers can really impact them. Depending on parasite they can have issues with maintaining a healthy weight as well.
• FRANK: This guy is a major soft spot for me. He’s a rescue so this is going to be a long one, sorry! I want to be as thorough as possible with his case.
I started going to a closer local exotics supply to get feeder insects for Stick and kept noticing this sad-looking Veiled chameleon in a really small enclosure with nothing but a couple of fake plants and some iceberg lettuce hanging from the top. He had massive marble-sized deposits in his eye turrets so it looked like he had 4 eyes, he couldn’t shoot his tongue or extend it beyond 1” infront of him, his balance was off and his claws or toes seemed messed up with some claws missing and some way longer than others. They were feeding him just iceberg lettuce with the occasional hornworm, according to staff, and it’s because he didn’t have the ability to hunt/shoot his tongue.
I took him to the exotic vet immediately and she put him on liquid calcium, broke up and cleaned out his eye turrets over 2 visits (he still has the leftover stretched skin today, poor dude) with antibiotic drops for home, and gave me a strict diet (basically, cake a ton of calcium onto anything he eats) to get him back on track. He was on a Carnivore Care liquid diet for a little while and then I would hand-feed him crickets and then dubias. I started pinching the heads of his dubias in a ziploc bag so that they’d be “zombies” (I know, I’m sorry) and move around without being able to fully get out of the shallow dish I had set up in his enclosure. He started eating them that way and it seemed to work well. Lately I’ve been hand-feeding him or using tongs and he’s super receptive to that.
I did notice that he seems to have some kind of blindness or confusion going on because he will often mistake the letter tattoos on my fingers for insects and try to shoot at them instead of an actual bug held right in front of him. My healthy panther chameleon doesn’t do this. He once grabbed a dubia with one hand and shook it around like a rolled-up newspaper while trying to shoot my partner’s finger next to it. He will also try to shoot my partner’s miniature dachshund from his usual basking perch in his enclosure, and that’s something like a 7-8’ distance (sometimes more) between them. When a feeder is there, he can and will focus on it and then go for it, so he does seem to recognize actual insects. If I hold an insect with my finger, he will usually aim to the right or left of the bug when going for it. I move it over a little so that it’ll get hit by his tongue but I don’t think he would otherwise correct it and get it on his own. Even with the feeder dish, he hovers over it and extends his tongue as far as he can (usually ~1-2”) in random directions that are in just the general direction of the feeders. It takes him several tries to finally get one in his mouth.
Since we have had him, he has shot his tongue at seemingly full body length just twice. He’s done smaller shots (~3-5”) but what usually happens is he repeatedly tries to extend his tongue at an insect and either gives up and withdraws his tongue if it can’t easily reach the feeder without shooting it, or he successfully shoots it a very short distance and it seems completely out of his control, like a hose under pressure that visibly spooks/surprises him when it returns to his mouth. It never hits the target. He’s actually hit his own eye a couple of times and he always looks surprised/shook when that happens. It’s super goofy but also super sad.
Could this be a sign of neurological damage? The vet said he had clear signs of MBD at the initial visit but his joints weren’t rounded and he was actually super fortunate there. He had what she described as a very soft jaw that has since gotten back to where it should be. His balance is a lot better and he never falls (though to be fair he had never fallen in our own experience, even before all the rehab, he just seemed a little wobbly and we were cautious).
His temperament was very sweet in the early days of having him and the vet told me that the weakest ones always were, which was heartbreaking. I’m happy to say that he has more of the classic male Veiled attitude now and will even hiss/puff up if approached too quickly in his enclosure. I’m taking it as a sign that he’s becoming stronger and healthier but correct me if you should. He seems a lot more comfortable now.
Frank is now on the same diet as Stick at the same intervals and with the same supplementation routine. Sometimes he won’t be hungry that day so I’ll try again the next feeding. Yesterday he ate 6 large dubias and 5-6 large silkworms. He doesn’t appear to have fat deposits on his casque so I’ve been more focused on getting nutrition in his body than watching his weight at the moment as he seems to be doing fine there.
Sounds like this boy did not have the start to life he should have. But is now very lucky to have someone like you. I believe his targeting issue and even vision issue has a direct link to a lack of vitamin A in his supplements. So this one is a big deal for them. And with all the supplements when you are new it is like being bombarded with info. So you pick some and pray your right lol. Not saying that they do not all have their place in the reptile hobby but with chams they need the preformed A. Beta carotene is what herptivite uses instead. The problem with this is that they have not proven that this can be converted to usable vitamin A. Most situations I see where targeting or vision is effected are almost always linked to the multivitamin not having vitamin A. After a few months of being on a multi vitamin with A these symptoms go away. So it is not an overnight change but one that comes with time. We do not recommend giving it more than 2 times a month even in a situation where they might be deficient because vitamin A and D3 are both fat soluble which means they store in the tissues. Too much can do the opposite of what you intend. So repashy calcium plus LoD version is the multivitamin I always recommend. It is a nice fine powder that does not overly coat insects. The ratio of vitamins in this one is also good. But just make sure you get the LoD version.
You will find with the mistking that their fecals are not as firm. As they start utilizing the misting sessions they will be able to clean their eyes as well. With males we really want hydration to be on point so that they are shedding their sperm plugs regularly and without issue. When they do not these build up and create major issues most of which would have to be removed by a vet.
Ok so lots of info. Take it one piece at a time.![]()
Awwww it really is my pleasure.I can’t begin to thank you enough for all of your input and how thorough it is! This is incredibly helpful and super kind of you to take the time for us! Thank you so so so much!
I just ordered the Repashy Calcium Plus LoD supplement. I just gave them the herptivite 3 days ago, is there a waiting period before I should give them the Repashy? 15 days from now or sooner?
I have their body height at 4-6” from the top screen when resting on their basking perches and was able to get UVI 3.0 readings there with my Solarmeter 6.5R. I was following the CA site care summary for this. The heat lamps are elevated above the enclosures so each is about 10-12” away from their basking spot. Should I change this? They seem to be doing well but they spend almost all of their awake time at their basking perches.
Thanks again!