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Best of luck to them to get them to produce eggs after the female runs out of retained sperm.
Some recently showed up in the USA. I know of one keeper that is working with this species and it would be great to work with some captive bred animals.
if i ever come to america, i'm bringing some with me. There is no law against taking them with you, as long as they are not wild animals, and are used to the human contact.
and a baby Mediterranean chameleon looks almost EXACTLY like a Veiled baby. I dont think many people can tell them apart. The adults are a different story.. After my studies finish, i seriously consider traveling or even moving to USA. For this summer though, i plan on going to Italy
i dont think anyone involved would be able able to identify a baby common from a baby veiled, especially if i take adult Veileds with me.. Anyway, my purpose so far is just to help the chameleons by breeding them and releasing them, all those i posted are hypothetical, i cant possibly know what will come in the future, but that's just an idea. Proper breeders are better than any CITES law, to provid an animal from going extinct etc. In my opinion, always.
greetings from a little chameleon friend I met in Spain!
I am about to write an article about chameleons in southern Spain, I hope I can post it on the forums to give more visibility to the amazing work of the people involved in the common chameleon conservation project in Andalusia!