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Gosh I have read this thread a million times and I still love it. I also loved reading this http://issuu.com/frankpayne/docs/keeping_chameleons_in_glass_enclosures?mode=a_p
I like how he used citations and sources.
Unfortunately lumping approximately 200 species of chameleon into a single category is not indicative of the broad range of requirements different species have. If you are keeping veiled and panther chameleons .....then I don't disagree that screen enclosures probably make more sense for a number of reasons. When you are keeping most of the other species or live in an environment where central air and/or harsh winters suck the humidity out of the air, I don't know that I would agree with you at all. There are more than one way to do things and glass terrariums take some different (not necessarily more difficult) strategies, but when done correctly, can yield excellent results.
Chris
I have a 24"x24"x48" made by Creative Reptile Terrariums purchased at the Vivarium in Berkeley CA, it is glass except for the screen top and half of the front for air flow. I am new to being a chameleon owner (panther 1 year old ambilobe) and I am trying to decide whether to create a custom drain at the bottom or add substrate - the dripper and fogger are getting way too messy to clean every day. Substrate sounds like it may be the way to go. Does anyone have any "recipes" of things they like to use/add. My panther often will shoot onto the ground to get a cricket and I am a little nervous of him picking up substrate and subsequent impaction. Thanks in advance for any ideas!
Nice post! Unfortunately for Americans, we can't get a nice big glass enclosure with a screen top without coughing up some big $$$, so I just use screen lol
For substrate you could use a mixture of moist sand/soil at 40:60 and compact it down firmly so there's no chance of him picking up clumps but keep an eye on the humidity and also cup feed to reduce any chances.
I used this for around two years with no ill effects before I moved to a larger screen enclosure. Will have to keep an eye on him though and make sure he is well hydrated and not eating clumps. It's always a risk though that most will say isn't worth it.
Thanks for the info...I am in research mode about this and appreciate your input.
I used a thick layer of sterilized recycled paper pulp (Cage Fresh brand I think) once for a very large high humidity cage and it worked pretty well. Moistened the pulp and packed it into the cage bottom. I wanted to try it as supposedly the pulp would not cause an impaction if a cham did pick some of it up on its tongue. It resisted mold quite well....surprised me how little attention it needed. Probably because it started off sterilized and didn't have the organisms that other substrates would normally contain. Did the usual spot cleaning for fecal and feeders, and when the cage seemed to have a funky odor I exchanged it.
happy to read this post.
FYI
Where I live, one can purchase acrylic terrariums (similar venting and screen as those glass exoterras) in very large sizes, which I think are quite suitable for panthers. If I didnt build my own cages, those are what I would buy.