Wax worms???

ChamNewb23

New Member
Hey everyone, this is actually my first post here I just signed up yesterday. I have a 6 month old blue panther chameleon, he's a perfect cham and is super herby. He loves eatIng crickets and super worms but I just went to go pickup crickets today and they were out till tomorrow. Only thing I could get my hands on we're wax worms ( I have super worms but I only feed him a couple a week).

Question is can I feed the wax worms or should I feed a couple supers?
 
Hey everyone, this is actually my first post here I just signed up yesterday. I have a 6 month old blue panther chameleon, he's a perfect cham and is super herby. He loves eatIng crickets and super worms but I just went to go pickup crickets today and they were out till tomorrow. Only thing I could get my hands on we're wax worms ( I have super worms but I only feed him a couple a week).

Question is can I feed the wax worms or should I feed a couple supers?

Sorry for the typos I'm on my phone.
 
You can feed waxworms, and he'll likely find them quite tasty. They are quite fatty, as feeders go, so most people limit them to one or two feedings a month. The supers are considered healthier, but I find everybody likes an occasional waxworm treat.
 
waxworms provide next to no useful value
instead choose silkworms, butterworms and superworms

?

http://www.grubco.com/Nutritional_Information.cfm

A bit higher in fat than superworms
A bit less protein
higher in fiber
higher in calcium
lower in phosphorous

They are fed a significant amount of honey which has some good things in it.

I sure wish I could find a real nutritional analysis of feeders though- with vitamins, minerals and amino acid content.

Long, long ago Reptiles magazine had an article on how to raise them that offered a diet that supposedly significantly improved their nutritional value (to the point that the author fed them lots over the long term).

That is another thing I wish I could find- a nutritional comparison with *complete* nutritional analysis of well fed vs from the insect farm.

Insects provide more nutritionally than fat, protein, calcium and phosphorous and ash.

I think they are fine for variety.

But they are too expensive if you have a lot of lizards. And they are too addicting if you feed them too often- I've met many a leopard gecko owner who has told me their pet was fed waxworms for a while and then refused other food and then after several months of waxworms only refused to eat altogether.
 
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