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What you see is essentially all there is. I am not in there while there are people, but it's still daytime and I spray water in there (it seems so dry to me I can't help it) I don't know if they feed it or spray manually, but it doesn't seem to me that they should have it as a class pet.I think it looks stressed, dehydrated or possibly gravid. Is it female? I think it is. What does the setup look like?
Yep, just a tree in a pot, and a vine hanging on the side. They have a heating light, but i don't think it has seen the sun since they got it. Her you say? urks me and I'm thinking of trying to get it a new home (possibly my home)So its just a tree? What type of lights are there? She looks stressed and/or sick to me, possibly due to incorrect husbandry
Yes I believe it is a her. If they have not supplemented with calcium or have a uvb light there is a very high chance of mbd. A new home may help her, but she also could be in very bad health.Yep, just a tree in a pot, and a vine hanging on the side. They have a heating light, but i don't think it has seen the sun since they got it. Her you say? urks me and I'm thinking of trying to get it a new home (possibly my home)
chameleons are actually the 2nd hardest reptiles to care for in the world
i believe it is the varanid because they need a 140-160 degree fahrenheit basking spot
yes i don't really know much about them but i figured that if you had something that got THAT your whole house would be warmer. when my chams lights were on (basking spot around 83) it made my room a lot warmer. imagine 160 degrees. like i said i'm not an expert on them and i've breifly read up on themSo....Buy a higher wattage bulb?
What actually makes varanids challenging to keep is not only meeting their varied and sometimes complex dietary requirements, but allowing them to properly behave (providing 3+ ft of soil for digging, large water sources for swimming, etc). When monitors are mentally stimulated and enriched, they make fantastic and rewarding (but still dangerous) pets. The problem is that a good 50% of them are kept incorrectly, which turns them into obese eating machines who eventually die from liver failure.