@cyberlocc , It is time to come clean. While Petr was the force behind exposing the concept of nighttime fogging to the US digital community at large it was me that coined the term “Naturalistic Hydration”. And I am the one responsible/to blame for explaining it to the community in those terms. While it was convenient to hide behind the august reputation of Petr Necas, this issue just derailed a perfectly good rant against Facebook. And so I knew I needed to take action, come forward, and face the music with…a wall of text.
The reason why I chose “naturalistic hydration” to describe this concept was that that is what it was compared to the standard practice. In captivity (this will be gross generalizations), our chameleons follow our modified environment where we let the cage dry out at night and then mist and drip during the day. In nature it is higher humidity at night and the day is the chance to dry out when the sun comes up. Obviously, all are gross generalizations as my friends in Alabama would love to have a swing in humidity.
You are absolutely correct that this is dry season weather. During the wet season it can be raining all the time. How do we choose between the two? It is mostly because of what works best in captivity. If I advise a dry season schedule then we get the nighttime hydration and then we get the drying out that is necessary to avoid the bacteria blooms and the foot sores, etc. So the term “naturalistic hydration” was chosen at the very high level to make it clear that high night time humidity is natural. It isn’t just the ramblings of a crazy Czech sipping the nectar of the rare Madagascar poppy during a full moon. It is something we see evidence of everywhere. The important thing about this was not to say this was the one schedule that encompasses all things natural, but that there was a very important key hidden in adhering to the natural rhythms. And that the nighttime fog did contribute to the hydration cycle. It was very important to try to simplify this as much as was possible. People trying it (including me) were getting unmistakable results in chameleon hydration. But the social media experts (that strangely think they are at the forefront of knowledge while simultaneously rejecting anything they don’t understand) were fighting against this with compelling arguments such as “That’s ridiculous, chameleons don’t drink at night!” even though it was all explained and laid out with scientific paper evidence in the podcast where naturalistic hydration was presented. So, a public education campaign not only had to explain the concept, but counteract the people actively resisting understanding something new.
So, this all was to push home that nighttime fogging was not a new idea, but a realization of what is going on in nature. And it was never meant to imply that this represents everything that goes on in nature. My intention was simply to get people exposed to nighttime fogging as something that corrects a number of issues brought on by our insistence in making their high humidity time during the day instead of during the nighttime.
So why wouldn’t we recreate wet seasons too? The most common chameleon species we have in the hobby have wet and dry seasons. Our Kenyan species, like Jackson’s, have two of each per year. I do not know how important have both a wet and dry season is for our chameleons. And by “I don’t know” I mean I do not have any evidence that they need both. Sure I can speculate. But we can’t say we know until someone gets a brood of Jackson’s, splits them up, and does dry season all year for one group and two wet and two dry season conditions for the other and reports the conditions (and then they are replicated by someone else). I would love for this to be done one day. Put this on the list of things we need to figure out. At this point I am not seeing anything about the raising of Jackson’s, Panther, Veiled, and my other species that suggests that dry season conditions (with ample water and shelter available) are detrimental or produce chameleons with a lack of vitality. But I do know that trying to replicate wet season conditions in the standard chameleon cage is very problematic and leads to many health conditions. So why don’t they just all get sick in the wild and die? I think we can all agree that air movement is the #1 suspect. Once you apply air movement to a cage you have great leeway in what chameleons can tolerate. High temp + High humidity = RI? I think this has been true because the equation really is High temp + High humidity + stagnant air = RI. If you got the air moving I think RI would fall. Stagnant air is bad for health whether dry or humid. And this explains why constant misting during the hot summer months to cool down our outdoor chameleons does not result in sickness.
So, we can call nighttime fogging anything we want. I chose naturalistic hydration to highlight that this change in husbandry was to get back closer to what they see in nature. It was chosen to contrast what we were doing. And that was actually important to me, personally, because if something is working there needs to be an exceptional reason to change it. Usually, the only good reason is to get closer to nature with the faith that this will end up being better husbandry. High nighttime humidity is getting closer to what chameleons were designed to live in so it is worth it to investigate replicating.
So, that’s the background as far as my involvement in this topic. The forums are definitely the place to discuss things like this so I say we explore the topic.
The reason why I chose “naturalistic hydration” to describe this concept was that that is what it was compared to the standard practice. In captivity (this will be gross generalizations), our chameleons follow our modified environment where we let the cage dry out at night and then mist and drip during the day. In nature it is higher humidity at night and the day is the chance to dry out when the sun comes up. Obviously, all are gross generalizations as my friends in Alabama would love to have a swing in humidity.
You are absolutely correct that this is dry season weather. During the wet season it can be raining all the time. How do we choose between the two? It is mostly because of what works best in captivity. If I advise a dry season schedule then we get the nighttime hydration and then we get the drying out that is necessary to avoid the bacteria blooms and the foot sores, etc. So the term “naturalistic hydration” was chosen at the very high level to make it clear that high night time humidity is natural. It isn’t just the ramblings of a crazy Czech sipping the nectar of the rare Madagascar poppy during a full moon. It is something we see evidence of everywhere. The important thing about this was not to say this was the one schedule that encompasses all things natural, but that there was a very important key hidden in adhering to the natural rhythms. And that the nighttime fog did contribute to the hydration cycle. It was very important to try to simplify this as much as was possible. People trying it (including me) were getting unmistakable results in chameleon hydration. But the social media experts (that strangely think they are at the forefront of knowledge while simultaneously rejecting anything they don’t understand) were fighting against this with compelling arguments such as “That’s ridiculous, chameleons don’t drink at night!” even though it was all explained and laid out with scientific paper evidence in the podcast where naturalistic hydration was presented. So, a public education campaign not only had to explain the concept, but counteract the people actively resisting understanding something new.
So, this all was to push home that nighttime fogging was not a new idea, but a realization of what is going on in nature. And it was never meant to imply that this represents everything that goes on in nature. My intention was simply to get people exposed to nighttime fogging as something that corrects a number of issues brought on by our insistence in making their high humidity time during the day instead of during the nighttime.
So why wouldn’t we recreate wet seasons too? The most common chameleon species we have in the hobby have wet and dry seasons. Our Kenyan species, like Jackson’s, have two of each per year. I do not know how important have both a wet and dry season is for our chameleons. And by “I don’t know” I mean I do not have any evidence that they need both. Sure I can speculate. But we can’t say we know until someone gets a brood of Jackson’s, splits them up, and does dry season all year for one group and two wet and two dry season conditions for the other and reports the conditions (and then they are replicated by someone else). I would love for this to be done one day. Put this on the list of things we need to figure out. At this point I am not seeing anything about the raising of Jackson’s, Panther, Veiled, and my other species that suggests that dry season conditions (with ample water and shelter available) are detrimental or produce chameleons with a lack of vitality. But I do know that trying to replicate wet season conditions in the standard chameleon cage is very problematic and leads to many health conditions. So why don’t they just all get sick in the wild and die? I think we can all agree that air movement is the #1 suspect. Once you apply air movement to a cage you have great leeway in what chameleons can tolerate. High temp + High humidity = RI? I think this has been true because the equation really is High temp + High humidity + stagnant air = RI. If you got the air moving I think RI would fall. Stagnant air is bad for health whether dry or humid. And this explains why constant misting during the hot summer months to cool down our outdoor chameleons does not result in sickness.
So, we can call nighttime fogging anything we want. I chose naturalistic hydration to highlight that this change in husbandry was to get back closer to what they see in nature. It was chosen to contrast what we were doing. And that was actually important to me, personally, because if something is working there needs to be an exceptional reason to change it. Usually, the only good reason is to get closer to nature with the faith that this will end up being better husbandry. High nighttime humidity is getting closer to what chameleons were designed to live in so it is worth it to investigate replicating.
So, that’s the background as far as my involvement in this topic. The forums are definitely the place to discuss things like this so I say we explore the topic.
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