Chameleon Company
Avid Member
Nico,
Even the question is subjective, and does not knowingly reflect the situation the OP had to ponder. In its natural state, this species is far more successful than it is with all of our hardware and TLC in captivity. In that state, it also breeds when it is ready, which would be at the first opportunity. Unlike what was suggested by another poster, this does not lead to higher mortality rates in the wild ... blah .. blah .. blah. We know this from what we see from the thousands of imports we have worked with, i.e. how they are fresh off the boat.
More to your question, it is the deficient husbandry that many chameleons get in captivity that is the root of why we are not as successful as Mother Nature. As I thought I stated pretty cleary earlier, years of experience with thousands of chameleons, and tens of thousands of eggs, has formed my opinion that, given a female that says she is receptive, failure is due to poor husbandry. In your example, the one thing that would favor an older captive female is that the keeper might have learned something better while waiting to breed her, and implemented such. THAT does happen fairly often. So many folks think that successful breeding (i.e. eggs hatch) is automatic, and only realize that husbandry is far more difficult with chameleons after they kill their first female, eggs don't hatch, etc. The added time to improve the mineralization of the female might come in handy, but only because they (the human) was not as smart as they thought they were when they first acquired her, and they learned.
It is not about anyone choosing to wait, as that is their prerogative with their animals, and their advice to give. It is the notion that the age of the female is the controlling factor to success, regardless of her growth rate, size, and willingness to breed, and that their own husbandry choice should be the rule for others, or that to do otherwise is to abuse the animal. It is almost comical how many keepers equate their results raising chameleons indoors, under artificial lighting, and with restricted diets, as being reflective of the expecations for that same animal were it in the wild, carrying on as it has successfully for millenia.
What I submit, and have long been aware of, is that these animals are capable of greatly out-performing the results that most hobbyists accept as "normal", and all it takes is lots of sun, lots of moisture, and lots of quality food. Where some keepers are capable of getting those conditions in harmony, the animal will show you a whole different, and improved, set of results than an indoor hobbyist is used to. Hope that helps.
Do you think a group a females that were bred as soon as they became receptive would live as long as a group of females that were bred much older?
Even the question is subjective, and does not knowingly reflect the situation the OP had to ponder. In its natural state, this species is far more successful than it is with all of our hardware and TLC in captivity. In that state, it also breeds when it is ready, which would be at the first opportunity. Unlike what was suggested by another poster, this does not lead to higher mortality rates in the wild ... blah .. blah .. blah. We know this from what we see from the thousands of imports we have worked with, i.e. how they are fresh off the boat.
More to your question, it is the deficient husbandry that many chameleons get in captivity that is the root of why we are not as successful as Mother Nature. As I thought I stated pretty cleary earlier, years of experience with thousands of chameleons, and tens of thousands of eggs, has formed my opinion that, given a female that says she is receptive, failure is due to poor husbandry. In your example, the one thing that would favor an older captive female is that the keeper might have learned something better while waiting to breed her, and implemented such. THAT does happen fairly often. So many folks think that successful breeding (i.e. eggs hatch) is automatic, and only realize that husbandry is far more difficult with chameleons after they kill their first female, eggs don't hatch, etc. The added time to improve the mineralization of the female might come in handy, but only because they (the human) was not as smart as they thought they were when they first acquired her, and they learned.
It is not about anyone choosing to wait, as that is their prerogative with their animals, and their advice to give. It is the notion that the age of the female is the controlling factor to success, regardless of her growth rate, size, and willingness to breed, and that their own husbandry choice should be the rule for others, or that to do otherwise is to abuse the animal. It is almost comical how many keepers equate their results raising chameleons indoors, under artificial lighting, and with restricted diets, as being reflective of the expecations for that same animal were it in the wild, carrying on as it has successfully for millenia.
What I submit, and have long been aware of, is that these animals are capable of greatly out-performing the results that most hobbyists accept as "normal", and all it takes is lots of sun, lots of moisture, and lots of quality food. Where some keepers are capable of getting those conditions in harmony, the animal will show you a whole different, and improved, set of results than an indoor hobbyist is used to. Hope that helps.