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I have in the past gone out and collected them in the wild. I got them to lay eggs and raised the hatchlings on sunflower seeds. The problem was that the sunflower seeds kept molding. Became very expensive to keep them! Sunflower seeds are not cheap!
I only worked at starting the colony. Had about 8 eggs hatch and make it to half size. I had a busy work week and did not check on them for a few days. When I checked on them again the entire bottom of the container was covered with mold and all the bugs dead!Did you feed them to your chameleons?
That’s my opinion, yes.So what I'm getting from this thread is yes, they are safe to use as feeders if raised on seeds. But might not be worth the trouble of raising them, right? Haha
@JoeDigiorgio I've been thinking about breeding anoles or day geckos for awhile now to feed my parson's when he's older. I'd imagine that'd be more natural than feeding fuzzies. I think insects should be the staple, but it would make a lot of sense that large chameleons benefit from whole vertebrate prey. My guy is only about the size of a panther atm and he is already eyeing up small hummingbirds that fly near him.... still too big though.
Definitely let me/us know how the anoles/grasshoppers go!
Yea I’d much rather feed lizards monthly than use powdered vitamins on my melleri honestly. That’s for another thread though.
@chameleonneeds I talked to john courtney smith about it, and he talks about it in some of the CBP's. This is likely where they get it in the wild. Might be a little difficult to gauge how much they receive from the whole prey versus supplementing. It's a balancing act for sure. I'm sure adult melleri and parsonii eat a lot of small birds, lizards, and the occasional rodent.