One more thing to factor into the supplements required by chameleons...
I was just thinking about insects today and it came into my mind....could insects be w source of vitamin D3?? Of course, I had to look into it and this is what I found so far...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-29232-w
"This study indicates that: 1) migratory locusts, house crickets and yellow mealworms can synthesise vitamin D3 de novo after UVb exposure, but attain different concentrations, 2) higher vitamin D levels can be attained with exposure to higher UVb intensities, and 3) vitamin D3 levels in yellow mealworms increase until a maximum concentration is reached during prolonged UVb exposure."
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-29232-w.pdf?origin=ppub
One more thing to consider...
https://mdpi-res.com/d_attachment/jzbg/jzbg-02-00027/article_deploy/jzbg-02-00027-v3.pdf
"The loss of calcium content resulting from insects voiding gut contents once food is removed, as is the case when they are placed in an insectivore’s enclosure and are not immediately eaten, has not been reported before in the literature. This is important as many insectivores do not feed immediately and so the actual calcium content ingested may not equate to the calcium content of freshly gut loaded insects"
I was just thinking about insects today and it came into my mind....could insects be w source of vitamin D3?? Of course, I had to look into it and this is what I found so far...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-29232-w
"This study indicates that: 1) migratory locusts, house crickets and yellow mealworms can synthesise vitamin D3 de novo after UVb exposure, but attain different concentrations, 2) higher vitamin D levels can be attained with exposure to higher UVb intensities, and 3) vitamin D3 levels in yellow mealworms increase until a maximum concentration is reached during prolonged UVb exposure."
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-29232-w.pdf?origin=ppub
One more thing to consider...
https://mdpi-res.com/d_attachment/jzbg/jzbg-02-00027/article_deploy/jzbg-02-00027-v3.pdf
"The loss of calcium content resulting from insects voiding gut contents once food is removed, as is the case when they are placed in an insectivore’s enclosure and are not immediately eaten, has not been reported before in the literature. This is important as many insectivores do not feed immediately and so the actual calcium content ingested may not equate to the calcium content of freshly gut loaded insects"
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