In the 90's, if you wanted information on Chameleons in the US, your source was the Chameleon Information Network (CIN). The CIN printed newsletters that you paid a subscription for, and they mailed them to your house..seems barbaric now, doesn't it.
Ken Kalish and Ardi Abate were the main editors, and the articles were filled with new ideas, theories, and studies on Chameleon husbandry, and species descriptions.
Ardi and I would talk on the telephone (no texting then kids) regularly. Ardi wrote most of the CIN in the later time frame of the newsletters life, and she exited with an explanation letter of why she felt she could not continue in the hobby. Ardi had kept detailed notes on the hundreds of chameleons that she housed outdoors mostly in sunny California. She stated that after F3 (third generation) she began to see negative factors in the offspring. By F5 she said that continuing on was producing low hatch rates, early neonatal deaths, and general unhealthy chameleons.
She left the hobby to reduce the habitat being destroyed in Madagascar, and knowing Ardi, she did. Her goal of reducing the amount of wild caught chameleons being harvested through continued breeding of captive bred was an impossibility based on her evidence. There would always be a need for "fresh blood" from wild caught chameleons.
This thread is not intended to debate her choice, or if we as hobbyists can save the chameleon from extinction.
This thread is to find out how many keepers have raised captive bred chameleons to F5 and above, and share what you have observed.
Nick
Ken Kalish and Ardi Abate were the main editors, and the articles were filled with new ideas, theories, and studies on Chameleon husbandry, and species descriptions.
Ardi and I would talk on the telephone (no texting then kids) regularly. Ardi wrote most of the CIN in the later time frame of the newsletters life, and she exited with an explanation letter of why she felt she could not continue in the hobby. Ardi had kept detailed notes on the hundreds of chameleons that she housed outdoors mostly in sunny California. She stated that after F3 (third generation) she began to see negative factors in the offspring. By F5 she said that continuing on was producing low hatch rates, early neonatal deaths, and general unhealthy chameleons.
She left the hobby to reduce the habitat being destroyed in Madagascar, and knowing Ardi, she did. Her goal of reducing the amount of wild caught chameleons being harvested through continued breeding of captive bred was an impossibility based on her evidence. There would always be a need for "fresh blood" from wild caught chameleons.
This thread is not intended to debate her choice, or if we as hobbyists can save the chameleon from extinction.
This thread is to find out how many keepers have raised captive bred chameleons to F5 and above, and share what you have observed.
Nick