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I wish there was information about the diet of wild chameleons, so we could extrapolate a rough view of what nutrients our chameleons might be getting from their wild fare.
And chameleon keeping leads to one more challenge!https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-29232-w.pdf
Now I have to gutload my feeders under proper UVB
@Beman what’s the proper distance for UVB with discoid roaches gutloading in a plastic container, no lid
I see your point here, Petr. I wasn’t solely concerned about the gut contents, though. For instance, certain vitamins are stored in fatty tissue, the liver, and other organs such as the eyes. So, regardless of the gut contents of certain insects, it might still be useful to know a bit about what food items occur frequently in the diet of the insects our chameleons often prey upon. The idea would be something like this:I guess it is a dead end and hardly doubt it Can be a feasible thing thought that chameleons would go for gut content of the animals counting on them to deliver Partly
Digested gut content. With poor
And inconsistent gut content and food variability not even consisting always from insects but various and very different arthropodS and mollusks and vertebrates it is so so highly improbable that it is close to absurd
I would not invest in such research anything
That is my firm opinion
Let is better some
Feasible hypotheses than these fantasies that will
Never become a research topics and never will
Deliver any meaningful results
lol These are numbers Bill Strand gave me when I needed to know exacts for a member that had a 5.0 without screen.https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-29232-w.pdf
Now I have to gutload my feeders under proper UVB
@Beman what’s the proper distance for UVB with discoid roaches gutloading in a plastic container, no lid
I see your point here, Petr. I wasn’t solely concerned about the gut contents, though. For instance, certain vitamins are stored in fatty tissue, the liver, and other organs such as the eyes. So, regardless of the gut contents of certain insects, it might still be useful to know a bit about what food items occur frequently in the diet of the insects our chameleons often prey upon. The idea would be something like this:
We know chameleons frequently consume insect x. We know insect x is a big consumer of plant y. We know plant y is chalk-full of nutrient z, and that insect x stores large amounts of nutrient z in its fatty tissue. If we thought nutrient z was important for chameleon health, that might be a good reason to try to deliver nutrient z to our chameleons somehow.
Hypothetically:
We know chameleons eat a lot of bees. We know bees are big consumers of nectar and pollen. We know pollen to contain a ton of nutrients, some of which (some of the carotenoids) are stored in their eyes. Say we know that certain carotenoids are crucial for any organism’s eye health (leutin, for example). Now we have a prima facie case for delivering leutin to our chameleons somehow.
This, in turn, suggests we ought to find someway of delivering bee pollen to our chameleons. Maybe this can be done with dusting and maybe by feeding our feeder insects pollen. Perhaps a combination of the two might be best, since we don’t know whether the insect’s own bodily processes make any contribution to the availability of the nutrients contained in the pollen. This is why I use bee pollen.
Personally I find this an interesting avenue of research, but as you know, I am no expert. Perhaps this line of thought is indeed fanciful, and I ought to forget about using bee pollen, since the thought process I used to arrive at pollen is silly. Or maybe there is some other reason I should base my pollen use on.
Well,Sounds like an anology to a chameleon eating a cricket that digests its stomach content that the chameleon can't then the veiled eating the cricket....sort of.
lol These are numbers Bill Strand gave me when I needed to know exacts for a member that had a 5.0 without screen.
Bulb = Reptisun 5.0 T5 HO 24W, 22"
Fixture = Arcada ProT5
No screen filter
Top = UVI 32.7 (this is highly variable. don't worry about comparing this number to others.)
UVI 6 = 6"
UVI 3 = 10.5"
UVI 1 = 21"
He sent me pics showing the ruler and the solarmeter 6.5 as well. I did not have a 5.0 bulb to test but it was very close to what I was seeing with a 6% arcadia in a single bulb t5HO fixture. My levels were a bit higher though with the arcadia bulb.It is. Wry hard to. Elieve these numbers
The intensity of light
Diminishes with square of the distance
Based on these numbers
Whe. The distance grows
3,5times (from
6 to 21”) the intensity diminishes 6times. Ut it shoud
Diminish more than 12 times
And whe. It becomes 1,75 times
More, it is 2 times less but it should ne 3
Times less
He sent me pics showing the ruler and the solarmeter 6.5 as well. I did not have a 5.0 bulb to test but it was very close to what I was seeing with a 6% arcadia in a single bulb t5HO fixture. My levels were a bit higher though with the arcadia bulb.