sandrachameleon
Chameleon Enthusiast
I keep reading how some kind of supplementation with preformed Vitamin A is necessary for chameleons.
Given I have never in all my years of successfull chameleon keeping provided preformed vitamin A, I am wondering how my chameleons stay healthy. I use a vitamin supplement (with beta carotene) every other week or so. No other vitamin supplements are used.
So, setting aside the possibility that they dont need preformed vitamin A..... Is it that perhaps one of my feeders coverts beta carotene into retinol? which is then injested by the chameleon?
all year round I use crickets (store bought and gutloaded on the typical things such as dandelion, yam, carrot, bee pollen, etc);
all year round there are superworms (home grown, eating bran, oatmeal, and the typical wet gutload things like dandelion, carrot, squash, orange);
several times a year i buy butterworms (storebought);
mostly in summer, but a few throughout the year, they get stick insects (eating primarily blackberry leaves);
mostly in summer, but a few throughout the year, they get isopods (eating whatever scraps are available, plus dead crickets, leaves, shed cham skin and such, sometimes dog food - but I switch them to a normal gutload for at least 24 hours before feeding off);
just a few throughout the year (Ive not had these all that long, a fairly recent addition to the menu) M Hissing roaches (home grown, same typical gutload as crickets get);
in the last few months I've added the occasional turkish roach (home grown, same typical gutload as crickets get);
a couple times a year i buy silkworms (usually fed on chow in the winter, leaves in summer);
moths (wild caught, inseason);
grasshoppers (wild caught, in summer only);
mealworms (not very often, same food as supers get)
cabbage loppers (wild caught, summer)
Why dont my chameleons have eye issues?
edit: mealworms sometimes used to get fish food flakes, not a lot, not often and I stopped doing this quite awhile ago (I no longer have fish).
Given I have never in all my years of successfull chameleon keeping provided preformed vitamin A, I am wondering how my chameleons stay healthy. I use a vitamin supplement (with beta carotene) every other week or so. No other vitamin supplements are used.
So, setting aside the possibility that they dont need preformed vitamin A..... Is it that perhaps one of my feeders coverts beta carotene into retinol? which is then injested by the chameleon?
all year round I use crickets (store bought and gutloaded on the typical things such as dandelion, yam, carrot, bee pollen, etc);
all year round there are superworms (home grown, eating bran, oatmeal, and the typical wet gutload things like dandelion, carrot, squash, orange);
several times a year i buy butterworms (storebought);
mostly in summer, but a few throughout the year, they get stick insects (eating primarily blackberry leaves);
mostly in summer, but a few throughout the year, they get isopods (eating whatever scraps are available, plus dead crickets, leaves, shed cham skin and such, sometimes dog food - but I switch them to a normal gutload for at least 24 hours before feeding off);
just a few throughout the year (Ive not had these all that long, a fairly recent addition to the menu) M Hissing roaches (home grown, same typical gutload as crickets get);
in the last few months I've added the occasional turkish roach (home grown, same typical gutload as crickets get);
a couple times a year i buy silkworms (usually fed on chow in the winter, leaves in summer);
moths (wild caught, inseason);
grasshoppers (wild caught, in summer only);
mealworms (not very often, same food as supers get)
cabbage loppers (wild caught, summer)
Why dont my chameleons have eye issues?
edit: mealworms sometimes used to get fish food flakes, not a lot, not often and I stopped doing this quite awhile ago (I no longer have fish).
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