Why chams lick lips

GooglezNvincent

New Member
i see my chams all the time licking their chops when i throw a cricket in or put a worm close to them, is it like salivation because they are going to eat, or are they doing something in their mouth to make the tongue sticky?
 
I love how they lick their lips after they've eaten. As if they are savouring every last morsel! Lily demonstrates this very well in my avatar pic!
 
yes i can understand after they eat they might savor the flavor, so therefore i wonder if there have been any studies for before they eat if their mouth is "watering" or if its something to help catch their prey.
 
If I stick a hamburger in front of you(or if you prefer a veggie burger), more than likely, you will move your tongue a little bit before you actually open your mouth to take a bite. This also help with getting the saliva around and positioning your tongue.(Try this, next time you eat. Before you open yor mouth to eat something, there will be some movement in your mouth beforehand.) So, I assume it is the same with a cham. This is very apparent in a cham on the first feeding of the day.
 
I love how they lick their lips after they've eaten. As if they are savouring every last morsel! Lily demonstrates this very well in my avatar pic!

After we eat, we use something to clean our mouth. I am sure we have seen how dogs lick their lips after thay eat. Most animals have their own way to clean their mouth area after eating. I am sure chams do it for the same reason. I am sure animals don't want infections of their mouths, so it is a natural thing for them to do.
 
My Melleri really do a good lip smacking before they want to eat. It is how I know if I should keep the food item around for them. If I don't see any movement when they see the item they are most likely not interested in food. Soon after noticing the food and not showing interest Lenny will flip her lobes a couple of times to show she isn't in the mood for food.
 
If I stick a hamburger in front of you(or if you prefer a veggie burger), more than likely, you will move your tongue a little bit before you actually open your mouth to take a bite. This also help with getting the saliva around and positioning your tongue.(Try this, next time you eat. Before you open yor mouth to eat something, there will be some movement in your mouth beforehand.) So, I assume it is the same with a cham. This is very apparent in a cham on the first feeding of the day.

well at least for me i dont wiggle my tongue around in my mouth before i eat anything lol. the true question is why do they do it not what causes it. would it be to re salivate their tongue, or something else
 
My bet would be just keeping the mouth clean. Food debris (think insect guts) drying on and around the mouth would otherwise build up and eating would become an issue, insects like ants would be attracted aswell id think.
My monitors consistantly rub the sides of their jaws on the branches after eating, same purpous i beleive.

Here's a question (or many) for the experts, do chameleons actually have taste apparatus? can they taste food at all? given the nature of the tongue i have my doubts, though there may be some taste apparatus (like tastebuds) elsewhere in the mouth, to tell them something is bad? or do they rely entirely on instinctively recognising edibles? can they actually smell anything? Are pheromones involved in courtship/mating?

why do they prefer one type of feeder over another? Chams are highly visual creatures, is it simply visual appeal, the shape of the bug, movement, color (wavelengths we dont see? Think insects with flowers they pollinate) ?

I want to know! :)
 
My bet would be just keeping the mouth clean. Food debris (think insect guts) drying on and around the mouth would otherwise build up and eating would become an issue, insects like ants would be attracted aswell id think.
My monitors consistantly rub the sides of their jaws on the branches after eating, same purpous i beleive.

Here's a question (or many) for the experts, do chameleons actually have taste apparatus? can they taste food at all? given the nature of the tongue i have my doubts, though there may be some taste apparatus (like tastebuds) elsewhere in the mouth, to tell them something is bad? or do they rely entirely on instinctively recognising edibles? can they actually smell anything? Are pheromones involved in courtship/mating?

why do they prefer one type of feeder over another? Chams are highly visual creatures, is it simply visual appeal, the shape of the bug, movement, color (wavelengths we dont see? Think insects with flowers they pollinate) ?

I want to know! :)

Very nice! good qustions, im going to take a stab in the dark and say they do ave tastebuds, because they can become picky at times.
 
Actually another possibility comes to mind concerning being picky with feeders...
Its a leap but then who knows...

Recently we all read of studies that proved chameleons atleast, were somehow aware of their current need for D3 and are able to regulate it by basking for UV specifically rather than just heat.

Could it be possible they can regulate their nutritional intake by similar means?
If you feed mainly crickets as a staple, then offer hornworms and they 'go nuts' for the worms, its natural to assume they are simply excited by the variety.
I wonder if an experiment, or series of experiments might prove enlighting.

For example, cease feeding for a few days, then using several feeder cups, offer a different feeder type in each at different places in the cage.
ensure the cham has a good veiw of all the cups avail and see which type/s it goes for,
in what order and how many.

recording this data daily over several weeks/months (throughout gestation?) should show some prefrence.
the nutritional values for the preferred feeders could be recorded.

Variables could be time of day, condition of the animal (e.g. gravid female, hatchling, senior cham, sick cham, cham kept exclusively indoors with artifical lighting, cham kept outdoors etc etc).

Anybody ever done so? (somebody could apply for a grant :D)
 
Actually another possibility comes to mind concerning being picky with feeders...
Its a leap but then who knows...

Recently we all read of studies that proved chameleons atleast, were somehow aware of their current need for D3 and are able to regulate it by basking for UV specifically rather than just heat.

Could it be possible they can regulate their nutritional intake by similar means?
If you feed mainly crickets as a staple, then offer hornworms and they 'go nuts' for the worms, its natural to assume they are simply excited by the variety.
I wonder if an experiment, or series of experiments might prove enlighting.

For example, cease feeding for a few days, then using several feeder cups, offer a different feeder type in each at different places in the cage.
ensure the cham has a good veiw of all the cups avail and see which type/s it goes for,
in what order and how many.

recording this data daily over several weeks/months (throughout gestation?) should show some prefrence.
the nutritional values for the preferred feeders could be recorded.

Variables could be time of day, condition of the animal (e.g. gravid female, hatchling, senior cham, sick cham, cham kept exclusively indoors with artifical lighting, cham kept outdoors etc etc).

Anybody ever done so? (somebody could apply for a grant :D)

well our govt just gave out like 2.2 billion dollars for a fruit fly breeding project, and this sounds much more scientific than breeding flys....
 
Lol Im sure your farmers appreciate it.
A grant to study food prefrence relative to nutritional intake in chams dosent seem an excessive
ask from a goverment that spends billions shooting a probe into a comet to see what its made of, not to mention trillions on defence. :)
 
Lol Im sure your farmers appreciate it.
A grant to study food prefrence relative to nutritional intake in chams dosent seem an excessive
ask from a goverment that spends billions shooting a probe into a comet to see what its made of, not to mention trillions on defence. :)

i wish we spent trillions on defense, but to be honest i dont think anyone really knows where its going. they keep cutting jobs in the military too. oh wait i know what was it lol 12 billion for north Atlantic sea salmon studies? lol we waste money on such stupid crap, bit oh well
 
i wish we spent trillions on defense

lol, we're way way off topic now, but why on earth? what is america so bloody scared of? your already the most miltarily powerful country on earth.

I think the sea salmon studies and similar things are worth doing, imo defense budgets are the crap stuff. *shrugs*

(pm me if you like to save the topic :))
 
lol the topic is long dead! lol just to put my two cents in, looking at history, and time is cyclical, every nation that rises to power eventually falls, seems that the big man on campus is worried and watching his back ;)
 
Rofl, ya reckon we mightve nailed this topic eh? :D

Actually Im hoping Dave weldon might've heard of such a study, maybe have a link, be intresting reading.
cheers
 
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