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I have seen a picture dealing with the pollutant chain in the ocean. Basically it showed that most organisms have the same level of chance to get (or have a certain amount already) pollutants (as a starting point), but as the creatures get bigger they eat the smaller and raise the chance of having higher pollution because they ate the pollutants in the smaller creatures.
This can be applied to land creatures and parasites as well. As the food chain rises, the predators are risking being infected with parasites way more. Anoles eat smaller bugs that eat dirt and smaller bugs that could contain parasites. Through this principle, the larger the predator, the higher the chance of infestation. Basically, where a WC cricket might have a 1:1000 chance of getting infected, a lizard that eats wild crickets all day might have a 1:100 chance or even higher.
Plus the bones and fat might be bad for your chameleon's diet since it probably has already been supplemented with other food items, and anoles are a pretty big food item.
I personally feed my chameleon wc bugs, but not many, I know just one could cause parasites, but I feel a herbivore bug has a lower chance that a carnivore. If you continue to feed your cham anoles I would be careful.
I'm not going to feed them any more anoles... It was just a test. I have feed him some WC roaches, grasshoppers, and some other things. I just like to change his selection every once in a while.
They are fine every once in a while. Chams get Parasites from the food they eat, Its not a big deal like alot of people think. Get a fecal done 2-3 times a year. The benifits from feeding wild bugs and lizards far out weighs the risk.
Grasshopper are loaded with parasites.
As are snails! And anyother bug that touches the ground has the potential to carry nasty parasites (for you and your lizards!)
That's what I'm trying to get at. Anoles eat bugs like grasshoppers and snails. So chances of an anole being infected is drastically greater.
And I'm not trying to say don't feed your cham anything WC, but just do it wisely.
you might as well dig a hole now...