Please help

dboddy31

Member
I have had my panther for just over a month. 4 days ago today. I put him in his new cage and things have gone wrong. He use to be turning red and blue was starting to come out. He is now brown all the time unless he gets to the basking spot. The basking spot is in the low 90's. I mist him three or 4 times a day. He does drink water. He is in a 18x36 screened cage. He has two heat lamps on his cage. One uv light and I run a ceramic Heater at night. Lights are on 12 hours a day. He eats 2 or 3 crickets a day. Never has been a big eater. He won't touch any worms ever since I got him. I've tried silk and super worms. First Month I owned him he lived in a storage bin with the same lighting. Breeder told me to do that cause he raised the young that way. He was also happy and bright colors were coming out when in the bin. Now he spends his day mostly in the middle of his cage and is brown and black. Sitting on a brown vine. Please help my little guy. I'm going to post photos of him healthy and now and his new set up. Thank you
 
Here he is now
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0300.JPG
    IMG_0300.JPG
    256 KB · Views: 114
When I pick him up and put him under his basking light his colors come back. He's cold when he's brown
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0291.JPG
    IMG_0291.JPG
    300.3 KB · Views: 135
I also wonder could he be Turning brown because of the brown vine he is on ?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0304.JPG
    IMG_0304.JPG
    327.7 KB · Views: 93
He most likely needs time to settle into his new cage. 4 days is not enough time for him to get used to the change, he will also need to get used to seeing more than he could from the bin. It can take them a couple of weeks to feel settled when moved.
 
I'm going through something like this , all it takes is patients, slowly hand feed them it works .
 
I have had my panther for just over a month. 4 days ago today. I put him in his new cage and things have gone wrong. He use to be turning red and blue was starting to come out. He is now brown all the time unless he gets to the basking spot. The basking spot is in the low 90's. I mist him three or 4 times a day. He does drink water. He is in a 18x36 screened cage. He has two heat lamps on his cage. One uv light and I run a ceramic Heater at night. Lights are on 12 hours a day. He eats 2 or 3 crickets a day. Never has been a big eater. He won't touch any worms ever since I got him. I've tried silk and super worms. First Month I owned him he lived in a storage bin with the same lighting. Breeder told me to do that cause he raised the young that way. He was also happy and bright colors were coming out when in the bin. Now he spends his day mostly in the middle of his cage and is brown and black. Sitting on a brown vine. Please help my little guy. I'm going to post photos of him healthy and now and his new set up. Thank you
How old is he? He should be eating way more than that if he's 8 months or younger. 15-20 small crickets a day.
I would suggest that you get rid of the heat at night. Chams need a temp drop of at least 10 degrees at night to help with their digestion and metabolism. If he is not getting that then it would be affecting his appetite.
 
You also don't need the heat emitter at night and I'd reduce the basking temp to 85F, 90F being an absolute max, especially on a young animal.
I think the color change is related to the new openness and you are seeing the color change when you place him under the light, because of the handling, because he will seek the temps he needs.
 
I agree with Extensionofgreen and Peachy. As long as you homes room temp doesn't drop below 55*F the ceramic heat emitter isn't necessary. He should also be eating alot more like Peachy stated. My young Veiled eats around 10-16 everyday along with the occasional superworm treat.

He most likely needs time to adjust to the new environment of the screen cage. Imagine living all your life in a brick building then all of a sudden being moved to a glass building. You'd probably feel exposed or stressed from the sudden change but will get used to it over time.

What might help is to add more foliage and plant cover in the mid section to fill out the enclosure a bit. this will give him more places to hide behind and feel more secure.
 
Back
Top Bottom