ALLIEGATOR
Member
So I'm very nervous about adding live plants to my enclosure. Wondering if it would be a good idea to buy plants online. Pros, cons?
Any website anyone would recommend.
Any website anyone would recommend.
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Purchasing big plants online costs an arm and a leg in shipping, but it works fine. Etsy has tons of options
I'm going to check it outYes!!! Def pricey for larger plants to ship... even for planta themselves. Pothos is always a good choice. Doesnt need a lot of light.. also drachnae is also a safe option.. and yes... etsy has some good things.
I've been told to watch out for pothos bc they are easily confused and some are toxicI went to 5 or 6 nursery's when I was setting up my enclosure and was unable to find anything I liked as a main plant. I ended up buying an umbrella plant off of ebay for $30 shipped around 3 months ago and it is doing well. You can find pothos everywhere (nursery's, home depot, lowes, maybe walmart) so no need to shop online for it.
Hmmm okay.They're all technically toxic, but veileds don't seem bothered by them.
They are considered toxic due to oxailates or razor shaped cells that act as a self defense mechanism ,they are also in schefflura aka umbrella plant another popular plant for chams. But with years of use and no reports of death or illness from pothos plants It's a staple. And a bad ass trailing vine at that .They do have 3 or 4 variety some vine more than others.I've been told to watch out for pothos bc they are easily confused and some are toxic
They are considered toxic due to oxailates or razor shaped cells that act as a self defense mechanism ,they are also in schefflura aka umbrella plant another popular plant for chams. But with years of use and no reports of death or illness from pothos plants It's a staple. And a bad ass trailing vine at that .They do have 3 or 4 variety some vine more than others.
Im sure Veiled dont discriminate what greens they chomp , unless it's the fresh ones you put in (from what I read, I have a juvenile panther myself he rarely goes for foliage). Maybe we can get someone to experiment by growing mustard and some collared greens in a bioactive?Oxalates can also build up causing gout-like symptoms, kidney stones, along with binding calcium, but whether or not this happens when a chameleon eats them I'd assume is unknown. It would be a slow burn over time from the sounds of it, causing problems later down the road. I agree though, in general it seems veileds don't have problems with them and most plants have some form of 'toxicity'