scs
Member
Hi everyone, I'm not sure if I'm over reacting or being adequately cautious... my year-ish old male panther chameleon, Sebastian, has been acting out of sorts. He skipped a meal this weekend and the edges of his eyes seemed darker. He's been retreating to his sleepy spot more often and hanging out there. That area has the most foliage in his entire cage so I can't tell if his eyes are sunken or if the shadows are making it seem worse than it is. Also, it was only 3pm when I came home from school today and he was sleeping already. Usually he goes to bed between 5 and 7. In case it isn't just shadows and instead sunken eyes (dehydration), I set up a dripper next to him so that he can reach water any time. A few weeks ago he was shedding, if that matters. Lately he's had dark red color, but he usually has teal stripes and bright red that fades to yellow and green.
I tried to take pictures with different lighting so that you guys could see his eyes. I took all of these pictures within a minute of each other, though I must say his eyes don't look as shallow in real life as they do in the first two pictures... The white spots on the bottom of his eye aren't actually that prominent so I guess they are reflections from bad lighting, but his red scales do fade away to plain/smooth blackish/dark skin around the edges of his eyes.
Chameleon Info:
Your Chameleon - ambilobe panther, male, over a year old, 8 months in my care
Handling - every weekend I leave the door open and do my homework in front of the cage and he'll come out several steps to eat, a few weeks ago he even used a few of my fingers instead of the branch
Feeding - we feed him crickets, wax worms, and meal worms; he gets at least a dozen crickets per day with meal worms in between and wax worms as treats
Supplements - calcium with every meal, alternating D3 and multivitamin each weekend
Watering - we have a HabaMist and a ReptiRain machine which are on every hour, one for 30 seconds and the other for 15; the nozzles are directed so that all plant leaves get wet
Fecal Description - his cage is huge so I haven't found fecal matter in a few days, but I have news paper on the floor of his cage so that I'll notice when fresh poop falls
History - he came from a breeder that has a lot of chameleons and goes to reptile shows; He's been to the vet before and the fecal tests for parasites came back negative
Cage Info:
Cage Type - http://www.bigappleherp.com/Colossal-Corner-Lizard-Cage
Lighting - one large growth lamp for the plants, a ZooMed UVB lamp, and a ceramic heat lamp, the lights are on from 6 am-7ish pm
Temperature - high-80s during the day at the basking spot and it gets closer to room temp as it gets farther away from the basking spot; night temperature is room temperature; we have a sensor hanging by the basking spot which has a display outside the cage
Humidity - we have the regular misting in the cage and an indoor pond around the corner; the humidity is generally above 50%; the temperature sensor (at the basking spot) is also a humidity sensor
Plants - all live: many pothos, and a small (safe, already checked) ficus
Placement - we have an open living space and it is in a corner there; there is a vent in the wall and a little fan (on 4 times a day for 20 minutes) to dry off the substrate on the bottom of the cage (there is a grid over the substrate which is in a pan that the chameleon can't get to); the cage is from 0 to 75% of the height of the room (total height is about 6 feet)
Location - we are in Pittsburgh, PA
I tried to take pictures with different lighting so that you guys could see his eyes. I took all of these pictures within a minute of each other, though I must say his eyes don't look as shallow in real life as they do in the first two pictures... The white spots on the bottom of his eye aren't actually that prominent so I guess they are reflections from bad lighting, but his red scales do fade away to plain/smooth blackish/dark skin around the edges of his eyes.
Chameleon Info:
Your Chameleon - ambilobe panther, male, over a year old, 8 months in my care
Handling - every weekend I leave the door open and do my homework in front of the cage and he'll come out several steps to eat, a few weeks ago he even used a few of my fingers instead of the branch
Feeding - we feed him crickets, wax worms, and meal worms; he gets at least a dozen crickets per day with meal worms in between and wax worms as treats
Supplements - calcium with every meal, alternating D3 and multivitamin each weekend
Watering - we have a HabaMist and a ReptiRain machine which are on every hour, one for 30 seconds and the other for 15; the nozzles are directed so that all plant leaves get wet
Fecal Description - his cage is huge so I haven't found fecal matter in a few days, but I have news paper on the floor of his cage so that I'll notice when fresh poop falls
History - he came from a breeder that has a lot of chameleons and goes to reptile shows; He's been to the vet before and the fecal tests for parasites came back negative
Cage Info:
Cage Type - http://www.bigappleherp.com/Colossal-Corner-Lizard-Cage
Lighting - one large growth lamp for the plants, a ZooMed UVB lamp, and a ceramic heat lamp, the lights are on from 6 am-7ish pm
Temperature - high-80s during the day at the basking spot and it gets closer to room temp as it gets farther away from the basking spot; night temperature is room temperature; we have a sensor hanging by the basking spot which has a display outside the cage
Humidity - we have the regular misting in the cage and an indoor pond around the corner; the humidity is generally above 50%; the temperature sensor (at the basking spot) is also a humidity sensor
Plants - all live: many pothos, and a small (safe, already checked) ficus
Placement - we have an open living space and it is in a corner there; there is a vent in the wall and a little fan (on 4 times a day for 20 minutes) to dry off the substrate on the bottom of the cage (there is a grid over the substrate which is in a pan that the chameleon can't get to); the cage is from 0 to 75% of the height of the room (total height is about 6 feet)
Location - we are in Pittsburgh, PA