Chameleon shedding and eating problems

nik.maldo

New Member
Hello all,

My veiled chameleon, which I believe to be a male by the back spurs, has stopped eating for about 2 and a half days now. I've had him for about 4 weeks and his age was unknown when I got him. He is a juvenile chameleon though, I know that much.

Anyways, I have seen him moving around, but I don't believe he's been eating. I tried putting a cricket on a leaf and putting it right in his face, but still he did not take the cricket. He usually goes for that very quickly. I made the mistake and gave him meal worms fed on a leaf for about 4 straight days when I first got him, so I'm hoping he did not just get accustomed to them. It just seemed he was ignoring the crickets at first, but now he won't even take mealworms.

I also am seeing problems with shedding. It seems his tail, back left foot and right front claw have some skin left on them. I bought him with what looked like an injury or excess skin on his tail, but the claw and foot are things he's developed under my care. The back leg actually looks a bit swollen at the bottom and I noticed an orange patch on his knee that was not seen on any other joint. I don't know, he's just not looking good and I'm trying.

Some background information:

Humidity: Normally 45 to 60 now, but it was dropping below 40 for a little while.

Temperature: Upper 70's during the day and mid 60s at night

Lighting: UVB light and heat lamp, but the UVB light is relatively new (about a week). Complete darkness at night and he's usually asleep by 8 p.m. or a little later.

Cage: Zoo Med Reptibreeze Screen Cage 18 x 36 " with cardboard instilation on the sides. Inside, but near window.

Foliage: Live Umbrella Plant that is the height of cage and a smaller Dracaena plant. Also a vine thing purchased at PetsMart.

Humidifier: Zoo Med Reptifogger that I run twice a day for like more than an hour each cycle

Substrate: Moss for right now, going to put dirt back in

Food: 4-5 crickets or 2-3 mealworms dusted in Zoo Med's reptivite or Fluker's repute calcium with Vitamin D3 and Phosphorous free. Mainly mealworms for the first little bit, but I know they're not good b/c of fat and the exoskeleton.
**The crickets are now in a plastic container with leaves on the bottom, could this be why he's not eating? I've tried to feed him several different ways.

Water: Dripper styrofoam cup and I've seen him lick off of the leaves. The water is not tap, but filtered water from the fridge. I was using water treatment for reptiles, but I heard this was not necessary.

I don't handle him much and let him come to me. Some days he wants to and others not. But not lately, he's just been a bit stagnant and standoffish. He was in a Zoo Med Naturalistic Terrarium 12" x 12" x 18" Glass habitat until about a week ago. So he may be just getting used to his surroundings because it is much more space. I really don't know what's going on, but I'm concerned. Please, if anybody has any response it would be helpful. I'm thinking of taking him to the vet this weekend.
 
What's the temperature in the basking area?

What supplements do you dust the insects and how often for each supplement? What do you feed/gutload the insects with?
 
What's the temperature in the basking area?

What supplements do you dust the insects and how often for each supplement? What do you feed/gutload the insects with?


Hello Kinyonga,

Thank you for the quick response!

The temperature is in the low 70's in the basking area.

For my supplements, I was using Zoo Med's Reptivite and now I'm using Fluker's repute calcium with Vitamin D3 and Phosphorous free. I use it daily with a portion of about 4-5 crickets or 2-3 medium/large mealworms. I've seen him eat the crickets before, but not lately. He has eaten mealworms since my post, so my biggest concern right now is his back foot/ bottom stem of his leg that seems to be swollen. I'll continue to monitor and see if he makes any progress in eating the crickets.

I leave a cricket block in the cricket cage for the crickets. Just like a light green cricket block from PetSmart.
 
Hello!

I am also a new veiled owner, and one of the several things I learned really fast was that the basking spot should be around 85-87 degrees for a juvenile. You can increase it as the cham gets older, but that may be a part of your problems.
 
The basking temperature should be in the low 80'sF for a young veiled. They need heat to digest their food.

For supplements it's recommended that you dust at almost every feeding with a phosphorous-free calcium powder. It's recommended that you dust twice a month with a phosphorous-free calcium/D3 powder and twice a month vithna vitamin powder with a beta carotene (prOformed) source of vitamin A. PrOformed sources dont build up in the system. Reptivite has preformed vitamin A in it which can build up in the system...but it's OK tomuse it once in a while.

The insects should be fed well and gutloaded before feeding them to the chameleon. Crickets, superworms, roaches can be fed greens and veggies such as dandelion greens, kale, escarole, endive, zucchini, squash, sweet potato, sweet red pepper, carrots, etc and a bit of fruit like berries, apple, pear, melon.

Please post a photo of the swollen foot.
 
The first picture is his normal back foot. It's his left back foot that is bad. The tail seems weird as well, but he was like that when I got him.
 

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You can put him in the shower on a plant Luke warm water while the shower is facing the wall allowing the water to bounce off on to the Cham
 
That's what I'm thinking Michelle. It's always good to have somme assurance. Thank you, I'll leave him in there for about 20-30 minutes and see how it goes from there.
 
You can put him in the shower on a plant Luke warm water while the shower is facing the wall allowing the water to bounce off on to the Cham

I let him sit in a lukewarm shower in the mist for about 35 minutes, but he's still facing these same issues on his tail, left back foot and right front foot. It looks as if it is impeding his ability to walk correctly and grab on to things. He can't close the aforementioned hand or back foot.
 
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