Chameleons Northwest
Avid Member
Here is an old thread (linked below) that I found to be very interesting and helpful. Particularly the comments by Eric Adrignola. One can see in reading his post in this thread that it is possible for an owner to purchase a cham that was overfed and grew at such a fast pace as a baby that it was destined for MBD. He writes- "I have bought 4 females from a particualr breeder over the years. EVERY one has come down wiht MBD of some form. Mushy casques, broken ribs, weakness, etc. Nothing severe - just that they all had it. I had some that were raised in full sun from day one. I kept them under new reptisuns, gave them some repcal and minerall 0, and even gave them sun a few times a week. They got the worst MBD I'd ever seen. one died from it." Even when the new, highly experienced owner provided proper lighting (including sun several times a week) and proper nutrition the juveniles suffered from classic MBD. Also brings up the possibility that too-fast growth may be the reason for the HIGH PREVALENCE of MBD within the captive bred veiled cham population. He really knows his stuff and his comments make a lot of sense.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/predator-his-story-682/
With all of us raising yungins right now, I thought this a very relevant topic.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/predator-his-story-682/
With all of us raising yungins right now, I thought this a very relevant topic.
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