tropical hubandry

embalizym

New Member
Hi all. I am new to Chameleons but not to high maintenance pets. In the past I have had some coral reef tanks that required me to be pretty OCD about care. I was given a male Jackson's from a friend who is moving away and can't take him with. He is a little stressed and was not in the most capable care before so I want some ideas for how to get him back to 100%. I looked over the forums for a couple days. I'm sure lots of this has been covered somewhere, sorry for asking repeat questions. I would appreciate any insight you guys have on this.

Temp: I live in Hawaii on the Big Island in the range they have moved into. I don't think I need to control temp much. days are 75-80 F and nightly lows are 65-70 F

Cage: He is currently in an ugly tiny bird cage in my yard because thats what he came in. I just ordered him a nice 18x18x36" screened enclosure. I got him a gardenia & a hibiscus for the new house.

Health: Yesterday I put him in a Rubbermaid box and he ate 3 big crickets so at least he is eating ok. I'd like to see him gain some weight tho, and to get a few bug cultures going. All I can get at my local pet store is crickets. Also need to know more about any standard parasite meds. I assume he was wild caught and has probably never been wormed.

Light: I think the sun is enough? If he is here does he need any vitamin D supplements? Minerals? Is full sun with plants for shade good or should I keep him under the car port so he isn't singed? I want to give him the ability to thermoregulate as he wants.

Water: Is it ok if I just let him get rained on? That was kind of my watering strategy because it showers morning and evening here. I covered half his cage for now in case he wants to stay dry.

long term plan, after I establish that he is stable & healthy: I have a spare walk in dog kennel 6'x6'x8' with like 1" mesh welded wire sides. I don't think he could get out of that but it will need a little more work to set it up. I was thinking maybe an orange or a tangerine tree for it as well as other smaller plants. Could he share that much space with a girl or two? how could I control food & prevent it from escaping in a situation like that?

Ethics: Yes he was probably wild. I could just let him go. I don't want to because I see big pretty Jackson's killed by cars and by cats & feral chickens every day here. I feel like he is already stressed and I would not want to release a compromised animal, and they are not a native species. I like him and I want to help him.

Thanks for any insight you guys have.
 
I think he would still need calcium and vitamin d. for the dog cage i would wrap a screen around it and attach it somehow. a screen small enough for crickets to not get out but to let uvb come through. And i wouldn't let him go for the fact he might not be very wild anymore. maybe somebody else could give you more insight for this. wish you luck abd welcome to the forum.
 
You could go very simple but yet very effective. Take something like a lemon tree, surround it with mesh at the bottom or completely (if you have lots of ferrel critters). Let him enjoy. The dew and rain will handle most watering, while the tree will bring in the feeders. Maybe add a good pollinator near, also (hibiscus). The wild insects are properly gutloaded, and jax are basically 50/50 of other supplements, compared to other chams. So if he is wild caught, he would theoretically still be wild somewhat. Therefore, guilt may be minimal.
 
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