BenjiTheCham
Established Member
Today, for the first time ever, I noticed my cham attacking the glass. I’m assuming it’s because of his reflection. Nothing has changed so idk why he started now. He seems really stressed out. What should I do?
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Could he be approaching sexual maturity and becoming territorial? Somewhere close to a year old, think all you can do is remove the reflection maybe changing to a screen cage if the stressing himself out persistsToday, for the first time ever, I noticed my cham attacking the glass. I’m assuming it’s because of his reflection. Nothing has changed so idk why he started now. He seems really stressed out. What should I do?
When I got him they said he was between 6-9 months old. From other people’s opinions, I’ve been hearing that it is probably closer to 6, but he could just be small.Could he be approaching sexual maturity and becoming territorial? Somewhere close to a year old, think all you can do is remove the reflection maybe changing to a screen cage if the stressing himself out persists
Veiled chameleon can breed around 6 months & panthers from around 8 months so yeah this is likely to be the reason he's stressing at the sight of himself not sure what species chameleon you are keeping.When I got him they said he was between 6-9 months old. From other people’s opinions, I’ve been hearing that it is probably closer to 6, but he could just be small.
Did you say that the way you intended?I had one that would see itself in the hood reflector. Solved that by not having ambient light in the room. It would seem you need the opposite. Maybe a 6500k led grow light on the outside of the glass?
Did you say that the way you intended?
Another way of looking at it... If you pass by a vacant storefront, the front window can make a great mirror, because the area behind the glass is dark. If the store window is brightly lit, there's very little reflection.
As long as the outside is brighter than the inside, there should be minimal reflection. I can't recall if equal candles on each side are sufficient, but that should be easy enough to test.So lighting from the outside of the cage, through the glass, would not help?
It seems like it’s best to go with a screen cage given a humid environment and leave it at that - this is my case. At the driest time of year I’m at 48-50% humidity before misting. Doesn’t seem worth fiddling with lights to reduce reflection.
There's a third (at least, and probably more for the imaginative & innovative) option—hybrid enclosures: Solid (but not glass, so reflection is no longer an issue) sides & back with mesh front & top for ventilation.Are there any problems with that analysis? I know what to do for my circumstances but I want to be helpful to those from other places weighing out pros vs cons.