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When my Panther did this I pinned a piece of collard green on the fake ivy and he had a few pieces of it and seemed to like it a lot. I have done this again every week or so.
Young Panther and Veiled chams seem to enjoy chewing. I've seen them chew vines, branches and large rocks. I think it's a combination of curiosity, boredom and hunger. It seems to happen after the feeder insects are all gone. The activity also seems to stop when they become adults.
It's one reason I only use live plants in my cages. I let them munch on the pothos instead of plastic. I had a couple of young Panthers actually damage the front of their snout after chewing on hard branches. If you have live plants they will chew on those first. The real lives and real branches are soft and pliable.
This chewing stage is a good time to introduce greens into their diet. Clip or drape collard greens or dandelion greens onto branches. Veileds in particular learn to eat these greens instead of their cage plants. Any left over crickets in the cage will munch on it too and get gut loaded.
To sum this up........I think chewing is normal. If you think the activity is so agressive that it may lead to snout damage or ingestion of improper materials you should try introducing a safer "chew" material.