Kaizen
Chameleon Enthusiast
On a previous thread, syreptyon made some some extremely helpful points. I was interested, and asked whether he/she had a source so I could read more. Even more insightfully, syreptyon mentioned that s/he did not have a peer reviewed paper, but that the info was widely held. This got me thinking: this forum is home to so many well-read, helpful chammers, why don’t we have access to scholarly articles about our passion? That is, it would shock me if some of the serious vets here wouldn’t jump at the chance of having access to scholarly papers/articles about chameleon biology, husbandry, ecology, nutrition, lighting, etc. I can just imagine some of you nuts out there (you know who you are) devouring volumes in the ongoing quest to expand your knowledge base and improve your skills. Indeed, it would be surprising if academia wouldn’t want access to some of the gems of data we’ve amassed in this informational vault we call the forums. Further still, there might even be oportunities for the more vociferous among us to contribute in academically palpable ways to the bank of Cham info.
I have no idea who runs this forum—who makes these kinds of decisions, initiates a dialogue, etc, but imagine being able to consult articles in peer reviewed journals about, say dietary evolution in insular populations of panther chams, or casque size as an indication of verility in veileds. I’m sure many of the nuts out there would love the chance to sink their teeth into some of this literature.
I have no idea who runs this forum—who makes these kinds of decisions, initiates a dialogue, etc, but imagine being able to consult articles in peer reviewed journals about, say dietary evolution in insular populations of panther chams, or casque size as an indication of verility in veileds. I’m sure many of the nuts out there would love the chance to sink their teeth into some of this literature.