this certainly will bring controversies (again) between the members.
I do not practice giving Retinol supplementation for baby chameleons.
Simply because i am afraid that I cannot give a proper dosing. Not that i can be sure to give proper dosing of retinol for adult/ juvie chameleon anyway.
But, my humble logic is that babies will probably be at more risk of vit A poisoning than adults (this is purely my speculation. I admit I could be dead wrong about this. It could be that the risk is about the same in adult. Who knows??!)
(We are still unsure about the necessity of this particular supplement in chameleons. as far as I know, the jury is still out there regarding this).
I do admit that i gave retinol for my 12 mo Veiled. as often as once a month, or as little as once every 3 months or so. What I did is I just brush a tiny drop of the solution to a hornworm or silkworm and let my veiled eat it right away.
I always make sure that he's hungry enough so that he will immediately zap the worm.
As far as my panther goes, I never fed him retinol.
I do believe claims by people who successfully raised chameleons without preformed vit A supplements.
As well as claims made by people who successfully raised chameleons without UVB and relying solely on D3 supplementation (i knew one person who did this -but off course, he is a professor at a herpetology department in University that studies the effect. So, he has the knowledge and tools to measure the proper dosing -I do not recommend hobbyists to do this)
As far as type of vit A, I used the Retinyl Palmitate.
I'm sorry I am a bit tired as I am typing this at 3 am.
I will have to take a raincheck tomorrow to check your vit A ingredients.
But, I am sure there are many other knowledgeable people from this forums who can chime in to approve or disapprove of my point.
Take their advise as well and weigh in the decision whether your chameleon really need this supplementation regime.
I guess my point is you should be sure that the symptoms your chameleon displaying is truly because of hypovitaminosis A.
Closing eyes is an overly generalized symptom which simply means there is something wrong.
It could mean many things from a simple irritant (dust), hypovitaminosis A, or even as simply as stress factor from the environment.
Also, eye problems can also mean different things from infection to lethal UVB exposure.
Sorry if my post makes you confused even more
