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My panther used to do that before he got his colours. He used to be either a white colour or completely black. He went black when he was basking under the light. After about a year he started going green, blue and red and lost the white colour.
Now he's matured he goes a bit darker, but not black, either when he's basking or when he's got the ump.
Somebody told me that's why they're called panther chameleons - because of their ability to go completely black so quickly
Hi, RangoRango. If the substance from your chameleon's posterior is whitish in color, it is a sperm plug. You can Google it and see. They adult males get these and they are harmless, but resist coming out. Tug firmly and it will come off. My panther had been off his feed for a while due to this. Pulling that off helped, but the bigger thing was giving him plenty of water. Mine literally drinking from a sports water bottle with a pull up spout. I have to drip some patiently on his nose until he rolls his eyes over to me to see if I'm being a nuisance or it is time to drink, but once he gets the idea, he drinks a lot of water (this in addition to frequent misting and other dripping water available most of the time).I feed him crickets that i just put in his cage, i'll sometimes lead a cricket his way to eat, but i haven't seen him eat in like a week. Hes seem's to have to what appears to me poop stuck to his butt and I can't get it off, or at least i'm afraid to hurt him. He's really small guy