Dave Weldon
Avid Member
Howdy All,
Although not many of us use mealworms as feeders, a fellow chameleon keeper brought this Gecko Forum posting to my attention and I thought I'd share it just in case someone here is seeing this problem too.
The thread has over 200 posts in it so I mostly skimmed through it. Many leopard gecko breeders have recently noticed a decline in egg production, eggs that won't hatch, hatchlings that fail to thrive or are born with defects etc. The common link was tied to mealworms. Addtional discussion and some research among the community speculated that it might be caused by everything from mealworm inbreeding to mold to pesticides. The bottom line seems to be to stay away from mealworms for now until this episode is cleared-up.
The entire thread: http://www.geckoforums.net/showthread.php?t=23998
A couple of interesting posts:
http://www.geckoforums.net/showpost.php?p=230663&postcount=173
http://www.geckoforums.net/showpost.php?p=235835&postcount=195
Although not many of us use mealworms as feeders, a fellow chameleon keeper brought this Gecko Forum posting to my attention and I thought I'd share it just in case someone here is seeing this problem too.
The thread has over 200 posts in it so I mostly skimmed through it. Many leopard gecko breeders have recently noticed a decline in egg production, eggs that won't hatch, hatchlings that fail to thrive or are born with defects etc. The common link was tied to mealworms. Addtional discussion and some research among the community speculated that it might be caused by everything from mealworm inbreeding to mold to pesticides. The bottom line seems to be to stay away from mealworms for now until this episode is cleared-up.
The entire thread: http://www.geckoforums.net/showthread.php?t=23998
A couple of interesting posts:
http://www.geckoforums.net/showpost.php?p=230663&postcount=173
http://www.geckoforums.net/showpost.php?p=235835&postcount=195