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You are incorrect. The about of energy and nutrients the female exhausts is far less with an infertile clutch. Females should be one year old before breeding. No exceptions.
Furthermore, line breeding and inbreeding are a big no no.
Very interesting...I reached out to a poultry veterinarian acquaintance inquiring about this. She said the energy and nutrient deprivation from a female hen developing an egg is exactly the same between a fertile and infertile egg. The only difference between the two is the mating process which may be more strenuous on a smaller hen (and the same goes with a younger female chameleon).
The second difference is the chance that the fertilized embryo may develop the egg in the wrong spot and cause issues for the female however this may also occur with unfertilized eggs.
She says that the same amount of energy is used for fertilized and unfertilized eggs and this applies to any egg laying animal; the yolk content (fertilized or not) and shell formation around the yolk is identical in nutrient deprivation of the female. She acknowledges she is not as familiar with reptiles as she is with hens but based on her studies and experience, the same should apply to reptiles as it does with poultry.
@Chameleon Mike any chance are you able to source the information in your post?
I reached out to a poultry veterinarian acquaintance inquiring about this. She said the energy and nutrient deprivation from a female hen developing an egg is exactly the same between a fertile and infertile egg. The only difference between the two is the mating process which may be more strenuous on a smaller hen (and the same goes with a younger female chameleon).
The second difference is the chance that the fertilized embryo may develop the egg in the wrong spot and cause issues for the female however this may also occur with unfertilized eggs.
She says that the same amount of energy is used for fertilized and unfertilized eggs and this applies to any egg laying animal; the yolk content (fertilized or not) and shell formation around the yolk is identical in nutrient deprivation of the female. She acknowledges she is not as familiar with reptiles as she is with hens but based on her studies and experience, the same should apply to reptiles as it does with poultry.
@Chameleon Mike any chance are you able to source the information in your post?
Makes perfect sense and great information.
Is anyone aware of a things we can do (environment factors) to discourage the formation and laying of infertile eggs?
My female is only about 8 months old now and she is acting like she is gravid again on her second clutch of infertile eggs. She laid her first clutch at 7 months and I really want her to gain more size before wasting her energy on more infertile clutches.