CasqueAbove
Chameleon Enthusiast
@CasqueAbove unfortunately there are no studies at the data you seek, much to my dismay as well. My point on that particular topic is that the perception of it being "safe and natural" can lead to overuse and I've seen some problems occur a bit too coincidentally after starting bee pollen too many times for me not to at least scratch my head and wonder if there is a correlation. Especially in the US "safe and natural" tends to mean "use as much you want!" and I just want to raise the flag of awareness a little that we don't know the full relationship of how it is processed or even what it contains compared to natural pollen sources of their home range so using it in moderation is safer in my opinion. I broke down the math of what a bee can carry in pollen in relationship to how much the bees comprise natural diet to highlight that it is still a miniscule amount of pollen ingested even if it is a main feeder source so heavily using bee pollen is not consistent with what is happening in the wild. So if we're going to try to match nature we need to be aware of what nature actually is and be judicious about using it.
I would agree with this. Natural does not equal safe. My wife just went through a severe manic episode from being prescribed something that was "Natural and Safe"
So I here you on the over use. Why didn't you just explain it that way.
If we are to use it as it would be in nature, heavily coating would break this rule.
This now makes more sense. It is not bee pollen, but its misuse. In matching diets we should match quantities as well.
As for the over all knowledge of what nutrients and vitamins are use and how they are used by chameleons is still a work in progress.