feeding mealworms

Personally I wouldn't feed him any. There are much better feeders than meal worms. If you must, then I would limit him to 1 a day. Try to get some silk or horn worms.
 
I would switch to crix, if you are using as a staple, meal worms have very little nutritional value, and a very hard chitin (shell)

Mealworms can be used to fatten chameleons up if need be, much like wax worms

For a one month old chameleon I would feed small probably pin head crickets or a little bigger and as many as they can eat.
Crickets much like silkworms are easier to digest than meal worms and other hard shell critters.

Make sure you are feeding the right size, no matter what the feeder

As stated above, I would feed 1 a day if you had to. No more than 5-6 a week if that much
 
Mealworms are a very poor choice as a feeder. They should be offered as a treat and no more then 1 time per week. They are like crack and can be addictive so find other feeders such as silkworms,roaches,crickets etc.
 
Oh my gosh-

Mealworms do have nutritional value you guys, and it can be signficant, especially when they are fed a good diet and not bran. Scan my back posts for more info- too lazy to post same stuff again and again and too lazy to keep references handy. But somewhere in there in the past year or two you can find links to nutritional analysis of mealworms that found they are comparible to crickets in some ways and superworms in others.

Yes- use as part of a varied diet. But there is no need to eliminate them, and they do provide benefit as variety. I breed zillions and feed them about 1x per week as an entire feeding to the lizards. I feed them the same dry stuff I feed other insects like crickets and roaches- the same good stuff goes into them. Just less fresh veggies and fruit, but even that goes into them as well.

Ferguson, in his panther chameleons book, reported that he used mealworms and crickets only (those two insects only) to breed multiple generations of panther chameleons in his lab. Furthermore, he reported that laboratory analysis of crickets and mealworms fed the same diet, found that the mealworms had a higher calcium content than the crickets fed the same diet. Which is one reason he included them in his chameleons' diet.

If mealworms had no nutritional content, leopard gecko breeders would not have been able to use them over many generations as a single food source for their animals, and they would not have geckos living in excess of 20 years on such a diet.

OP- for a single meal, just feed as many as your lizard wants for that meal. Use appropriately sized mealworms for your animal- tiny worms for baby chameleons. And use for variety only- not as the primary food source. Use as many insects as you can for variety.
 
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