RescueMom
Avid Member
I recently brought my sons Panther chameleon home because he was no longer able to spend enough time taking care of him. He was very dehydrated (the profile picture posted was exactly 1 year ago).
2 years ago on this forum, when my son first got him, my daughter posted a thread asking for help because he was having trouble catching his food. My daughter thought his tongue wasn't "sticky", but over the next years, we chalked it up to bad aim.
I've read a lot of the information on here, but it seems like panthers have a lot of trouble with their tongues due to vitamin deficiency or hydration.
I got a video of him trying to catch a cricket and I paused it at a few places and screen shotted it to show how much he shoots his tongue out. It's very sad, and I'm afraid it's serious.
What can i do ?
2 years ago on this forum, when my son first got him, my daughter posted a thread asking for help because he was having trouble catching his food. My daughter thought his tongue wasn't "sticky", but over the next years, we chalked it up to bad aim.
I've read a lot of the information on here, but it seems like panthers have a lot of trouble with their tongues due to vitamin deficiency or hydration.
I got a video of him trying to catch a cricket and I paused it at a few places and screen shotted it to show how much he shoots his tongue out. It's very sad, and I'm afraid it's serious.
What can i do ?