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I take it you dont have much luck with keeping chameleons but look at the great past time your misfortune has created...glass is half full, right
These are so rad, I saw some similar ones for sale on etsy, possibly you?
Have you ever tried making molds of some of the skulls?
This is a really severe case of metabolic bone disease in a Furcifer pardalis male . He was under therapy for weeks (that's why his bones began to heal), but finally his organs were already too damaged to save him. I only prepared this skeleton as an example for patient owners to learn from...
To sum up the problems you can see in the pictures: His jaws are deformed, teeth are partially absent (especially in the front), every single rib was broken earlier and deformed, even his hyoid apparatus and some fingers are warped compared to healthy chameleons. His spine has several old fractures, some vertebrae are completely out of place (and yes, he could still walk around, only a part of his tail hardly moved). His shoulders and hips are bent down like a sickle, forearms and thighs look as someone had folded them like paper (old fractures and deformations). The breastbone has a hole and his eye socket isn't really round shaped.
Hope this little guy can make everyone think about importance of proper care, especially UVB-lightning and feeding supplements. And about what really happens to the skeleton if a chameleon had MBD. Sometimes it doesn't look that ugly outside, skin and muscle may cover first signs. And there are still owners who can't imagine MBD could be painful - think those pictures might convince them it is. Would be nice if people could see this before buying a chameleon without knowing how to care for.
I give you some pictures of a healthy Furcifer pardalis male to compare and make the deformations easier to recognize.
1) how'd you get started
and what do you do with them all
Simply thought I should try with a chameleon what we've done with other pet skulls at university as students. It all began while learning for the anatomy exams... some years later a friend gave me his dead chameleon. And I had some free time in the evenings of a practical training in a foreign city, so I've tried to prepare my first skeleton. And luckily it worked.
Over the half of the skeletons stay with friends of mine, e.g. the big Trioceros melleri (one of my absolute favourites), the Kinyongia tavetana, some Furcifer pardalis and Chamaeleo calyptratus, an Archaius tigris...didn't count them all. I only got about 25 chameleon skeletons at home. Some stay in the clinics sometimes to show them patient owners (MBD, hyoid apparatus problems... everything you can explain on a skeleton), some go to conferences, one stays in a museum (or should do somewhen, didn't ask again yet). And of cause I take a lot of pictures for this thread and some websites for chameleon keepers who can't come by and take a look personally .