scooter0325
New Member
I am in desperate need of answers. My boyfriend and I rescued a juvenile male panther chameleon. He has been struggling from the very beginning, however, I feel his health is declining or at a “stand still” which isn’t very comforting either.
He lays on the ground of his enclosure all day long. His eyes are closed and seem cloudy if you can open his eye lids. It seems like he has NO energy, and if he suddenly has a burst energy he struggles to walk in a straight line. He is constantly falling over and unable to grasp onto anything anymore. Also I have noticed his looks constipated but I have been hesitant to mess with that area of his body outside of washing and cleaning it. Here is a list of what we have done so far to try and help this guy.
-Moved to a smaller enclosure to better control the temperature and humidity levels.
-Enclosure kept at 75-80 degrees with a ceramic heater used at night to avoid damaging his eyes (I’ve read that the red heat lights are not good for the eyes)
-He has a mister that lightly mists the enclosure twice a day. Any more than that will cause too much water build up in the cage and I’m trying to avoid any respiratory infections
-He gets a warm bath everyday (typically twice)
-He refuses to eat so we have to hand feed (sometimes force feed) a mixture of crickets, wax worms occasionally, and mealworms. Crickets are gut loaded and dusted with Herpivite, calcium with vitamin D, Repashy super food. We try to use the multivitamin and the calcium interchangeably every other day. The only reason he has any weight on him is because we started feeding and watering him by hand
-He refuses to drink on his own so I use a small syringe to give him spring water everyday to avoid dehydration
-I purchased Terramycin from my local feed store and I put it on his eyes everyday after giving him a bath (I read that this will help him with any eye infections)
-He has a brand new UVB bulb that shines directly on him and I use the ceramic heater to keep the temp up in the enclosure
This has been his care regimen for months and months with no improvement. I am unsure what else to do and it seems like he is miserable. I want to rehabilitate him but I feel like we are forcing him to stay alive and he has just given up. Can anyone give any advice? We are desperate for answers.
The last thing I want is for him to suffer.
Here are some pictures I just took of him while out of his cage for a daily bath. He will NOT move.
He lays on the ground of his enclosure all day long. His eyes are closed and seem cloudy if you can open his eye lids. It seems like he has NO energy, and if he suddenly has a burst energy he struggles to walk in a straight line. He is constantly falling over and unable to grasp onto anything anymore. Also I have noticed his looks constipated but I have been hesitant to mess with that area of his body outside of washing and cleaning it. Here is a list of what we have done so far to try and help this guy.
-Moved to a smaller enclosure to better control the temperature and humidity levels.
-Enclosure kept at 75-80 degrees with a ceramic heater used at night to avoid damaging his eyes (I’ve read that the red heat lights are not good for the eyes)
-He has a mister that lightly mists the enclosure twice a day. Any more than that will cause too much water build up in the cage and I’m trying to avoid any respiratory infections
-He gets a warm bath everyday (typically twice)
-He refuses to eat so we have to hand feed (sometimes force feed) a mixture of crickets, wax worms occasionally, and mealworms. Crickets are gut loaded and dusted with Herpivite, calcium with vitamin D, Repashy super food. We try to use the multivitamin and the calcium interchangeably every other day. The only reason he has any weight on him is because we started feeding and watering him by hand
-He refuses to drink on his own so I use a small syringe to give him spring water everyday to avoid dehydration
-I purchased Terramycin from my local feed store and I put it on his eyes everyday after giving him a bath (I read that this will help him with any eye infections)
-He has a brand new UVB bulb that shines directly on him and I use the ceramic heater to keep the temp up in the enclosure
This has been his care regimen for months and months with no improvement. I am unsure what else to do and it seems like he is miserable. I want to rehabilitate him but I feel like we are forcing him to stay alive and he has just given up. Can anyone give any advice? We are desperate for answers.
The last thing I want is for him to suffer.
Here are some pictures I just took of him while out of his cage for a daily bath. He will NOT move.