Dragon1516
Avid Member
Best choice would be a fogger and no light or heat at night. Bulbs put out heat which is not good when they need a temp drop at night.
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Best choice would be a fogger and no light or heat at night. Bulbs put out heat which is not good when they need a temp drop at night.
Oh ok i misread it however i can't seem to find what kind of chameleon he is getting first of all and second of all humidity naturally rises at night thats how it is in the wild so now I'm even failing to see an issue do to the fact having higher humidity at night is a good thing.He doesn't need fogger he has a problem with humidity hes trying find ways for the humidity to drop
jpowell86 was recently just talking about this on one of his posts.
NO, no, no!!! NO!! (Can you tell I mean no? )There is night head light which glows red. Chameleons cannot see this light. So yes he can have one of those eventhough i feel this wont solve his issue
Fogger? Did you read the thread? lol That's the last thing this Cham needs.Best choice would be a fogger and no light or heat at night. Bulbs put out heat which is not good when they need a temp drop at night.
Oh ok i misread it however i can't seem to find what kind of chameleon he is getting first of all and second of all humidity naturally rises at night thats how it is in the wild so now I'm even failing to see an issue do to the fact having higher humidity at night is a good thing.
As you could see in the quote you posted I said I misread about the Humidity and thought it said it needed to be raised and then changed it and apologized for misreading so your post towards me was completely unnecessary considering i had already cleared it all up.NO, no, no!!! NO!! (Can you tell I mean no? )
Read the care sheets if you don't believe me.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/care/lighting/
QUOTE:
Chameleons do not need night lights. A drop in temperature down to 60F (15C) is actually good for metabolism. If temperatures drop lower than that a ceramic heat emitter that does not give off light can be used. Chameleons have a photoreceptive scale (parietal eye) on their head that senses light so even the blue and red bulbs disrupt sleep.
Fogger? Did you read the thread? lol That's the last thing this Cham needs.
You are correct in one thing, we need to know the intended species to be more precise. With that being said, most Chams fit in the general range of 40-70%. Extended periods in high humidity may not be healthy.
Please people, do some research before stating falsehoods or half truths. I understand your trying to help, but misinformation can be worse than no information!
As you could see in the quote you posted I said I misread about the Humidity and thought it said it needed to be raised and then changed it and apologized for misreading so your post towards me was completely unnecessary considering i had already cleared it all up.
My comment was about you saying "all humidity naturally rises at night thats how it is in the wild so now I'm even failing to see an issue do to the fact having higher humidity at night is a good thing."
Although this may be true, your comment made it sound like it's a non-issue. It still can be. If you have an animal that by nature is only used to high humidity's in the 70% range and is developed over hundreds of years to thrive in that environment then place it in a humidity that is upwards of 90% humidity, it may be miserable! Look at it this way, your from San Antonio. The weather there does get cold from time to time, but it would be improper top say "people from San Antonio Texas can live normally in cold weather", then transplant you to the Antarctic to live with no extra clothing but what you would normally have in San Antonio and expect you be be healthy and happy. Don't give the OP a false sense of security. To much humidity is too much.
If I'm wrong I'm wrong, I think it's safe to say that neither of us are experts. Unless one of us gets a PHD in Chameleon biology, we shouldn't speak in absolutes.
My last comment about doing research was not aimed at you. Forums are hard to to interpret peoples meanings aside from the written words. There are a lot of places to mistake a comment and lots of ways to do it. I did not intend to offend you.
I'm sorry I quoted you about the fogger. I didn't realize it was the same person from the post after it. I get small windows at work to look at the forum, so I read for content and not always the full story or link two posts together. That's my bad.
Hopefully someone who breeds Chams or has much more experience will chime in set the record straight. I'd be interested to know what kind of long term affects high humidity will have on a Cham. In my honest opinion, if the OP can not resolve the humidity issue, if it will be an issue, he should probably consider a more suitable pet,like frogs.
I had commented and said too much humidity at night was bad and that even 80% may be pushing it for a veiled right before your post.OK so i found the part where it says its a veiled so ya 90 is way too high for him. I would say 80% would be pushing it still. Honestly the best thing you could do is buy a screen cage. glass cages have their own issues first of all and are better used with chameleons that need high humidity levels.
Constant high humidity in a cage with poor airflow (even exoterras have poor airflow compared to screens) can cause URI. Which can then lead to LRI or pneumonia. Eventually fungi/bacteria can develop in the lungs and cause serious issues. But this is the same for any animal that is kept too humid when it's cold and there is not enough airflow. LRI lead to death as do URI. Treating these conditions uses a lot of antibiotics which we all know chameleons do not do well with. It's just something that should not happen. High humidity is fine, AS LONG as there is airflow.