View Full Version : Bearded Pygmy Chameleon
meow_mix450
07-23-03, 11:28 AM
Hi
u might have seen me posting and asking questions about veiled chameleons panthers etc....well im not gonna buy all the different speices im just trying to learn wut kind of species there are and what are the best ones to start of with...and i dont want to get a bad impression that im gonna get all these differnt speices:P i do all my research before i even think about gettin one...but i went to google and tired lookin for some care sheet for bearded Pydmy chameleon but i only got sooooo little information and didnt kno much about it...so i was wondering if anyone knew any good sites on these little guys and give them to me so i can read and understand how to take care of them thanks:D
Hello again Meow!
I have a small breeding group of the R. brevicaudatus and I think they are the coolest little chameleons. I wouldn't say they are easy to care for though. I like the fact that they can live in a heavily planted tank and you can keep many females and one male together at once, unlike the larger arboreal species. They also don't take up a lot of room. Problem with the smaller species is food! They eat like pigs and the search for appropriate sized insects can be hard and expensive.
Anyways, click here (http://www.adcham.com/html/taxonomy/species/r-brevicaudatus.html) for a good caresheet.
Hope this helps!
Trace
meow_mix450
07-23-03, 11:49 AM
hey
Ya i saw some of ur baby Bearded Pygmy looks really cute...thats why i found them intresting cus they are so small and how they are heavily planted...where would do u get the fruit flies??? i see them in my house once in a while when i leave like a piece of apple etc for more then a week lol but where do u get urs??? and how much would in cost in CDN dollars???(Bearded Pygmy Chameleon) thanks for the site
Hello again!
They sure are cute, I'm very proud of my little dudes.
Here is an old pic of my set-up for the adult R. brevicaudatus. The tank is 24x12x12 and those are live plants in there. Those plants have grown in considerablely now and some days it's hard to find all of the chameleons in there!
http://www.ssnakess.com/photopost/data/500/405119-1909-med.jpg
As for bugs, you can buy flightless fruit fly cultures at most pet shops and then all you have to do is maintain the colony of flies. There are many websites with tips on how to grow them, if you don't get instructions when you buy them. More than the flies, I use 1/8" or 1/4" crickets for my pygmy's. Currently I am going through 1000 small crickets a week for those guys.
Prices? I don't see these guys for sale very often, but I would suspect that you would pay between $50 and $100 for each animal.
Cheers!
Trace
meow_mix450
07-23-03, 12:07 PM
o wow thats awesome i like wut u did to the cage but u do put a lid on top rite lol??? i dunno u might have been cleaning the cage...Those prices are crazy, but i bet its worth it...i went to the july 6th expo and say one there but i didnt get a chance to ask i forgot but thanks
Hi,
Yeah those R. brevi's are pretty damn cool. I've wanted a trio for the longest time, but I have never seen ONE for sale locally. If you breed them successfully Trace, I'd be interested in a few. Where did you get yours?
Cage setup should consist of a mixed soil and oak leaves, it should be heavily planted with tropicals you can find for 1-2$ each at your local nurseries or wal-mart, you can have a small water feature such as a waterfall or stream, make sure the water is shallow as they may drowned, and you can add some drift wood and rocks for effect. They don't need UVB since they live on the forest floor and the sun doesn't really penetrate through that low in the rain forests, but some people note that it doesn't harm them in any way, but for this reason, you should supplement vitamin D3 a little more often than you would a larger species of chameleon. They do go through a lot of food and you should have a number of FF cultures going a few months before you get your cham(s).
I've seen them for sale on web sites for 15-40$.
They lay 2 eggs every 2 months I heard, and incubation time isn't very long. If we had a number of people breeding them that would be awesome, I would sure buy a few. I have an 85 gallon tank that I would LOVE to make into a pygmy cham vivarium.
A new species that is really hot in the States is R. ulugerensis (spelling?), they have blue eye turrets and are pretty nice, also a good starter pygmy cham.
I wonder if pygmy chams can be housed successfully with larger species of dart frogs??? Any thoughts? I know they can be housed with some species of day geckos.
-Brock
Trace these are really awsome !
1000 crix a month ? How many pigmies do you have ?
Will they eat small worm ?
thanks.
WYZ
meow_mix450
07-24-03, 11:14 AM
ya i cant find these guys in pet stores either the only time i saw it was the the last reptile expo my frist time going...and cany anyone tell me what kind of live plants you put in the cages?
Live plants would include small palms, pothos, Ficus pumilia, scheffleria, ivy, prayer plant, cane plant, any kinds of ferns, spider plant, croton, bromeliads (I think they are non-toxic), gesneriads, african violets, chimereas, miniatures, and anything that isn't too bright or waxy that you can find at Wal-Mart.
-Brock
Hey folks! :D
I'm going to try and answer everyone's questions at once here.
Meox mix: Yes, I do have a lid and UVB light on their cage. As Brock indicated, the R. brevicaudatus may or may not need the UV light for proper health but due to the fact I have sssooo many chameleons right now, I always have spare UV tubes in the house and I figure it's not going to hurt them. As for the pygmy's you saw at the July 6th expo... they were a trio of R. temporalis... and those weren't for sale as I bought those earlier in the day! :p I use Pothos plants almost exclusively in all of my chameleon cages. I find they grow very quickly and are non-toxic in case of accidental ingestion.
Brock: Yes, I will be selling the babies very shortly. I have 2 newborns right now (that I'm keeping) and 4 clutches of 10 eggs that I'm incubating. The first clutch is due about the beginning of August and the last one is due mid September. Keep your fingers crossed that all goes well because I would like to see more of these little guys in Canada. I bought my original WC group at the previous reptile expo in April. Now I do agree with your tank set-up ideas, but I don't like the stream/waterfall idea. I find they do better if the soil is allowed to dry out over the course of the day. I have found that my females always look for the dryest areas to lay their eggs, for some reason they seem to get upset with the constant wet dirt. :confused: So all I do now is heavily mist the cage first thing in the morning and that's it. It seems to be working for me. Holy moly would I love a group of the R. uluguruensis, they are cool little beasts, but I have not seen them available in Canada yet. And lastly, I wouldn't house any other animals with the pygmy's as I feel that you shouldn't mix species at all. I don't have to list the reasons why, you know them. Others may have different opinions though. I'm not the dart frog expert around here.
WYZ: Right now I have 1.2.2 R. brevicaudatus and 1.2 R. temporalis. I have, unfortunately, lost a few of the original females out of the brev group which is why I am keeping the next few babies I get. I need to bring the breeding numbers back up. Yes, they can eat small silkworms, but I just don't have any at the moment, as I have no success with breeding those bugs at all! The prime reason I go through so many bugs a week is I really can't be bothered to keep them alive! Upon arrival here, all of my insects are properly gutloaded before they are given as food to my chameleons, but, if over the course of the week some bugs die off, I'm not going to worry about it. I'd rather spend my time working with my animals than working with the bugs they eat. My time is worth more to me than the price I pay for insects. Make sense?
Cheers!
Trace
meow_mix450
07-24-03, 09:10 PM
hey
u gonna sell the other clutches when there a couple of months old or are u gonna hang on to them??? and if u do sell them how much would u sell them for cause i cant find any of these guys anywhere besides the show and from breeders so let us kno
thanks
Trace, I'll get a few from you if they are reasonably priced, and hopefully I might find some at the Red Deer show next month in Alberta. We will officially start the PYGMY PROJECT CANADA (PPC). We can exchange offspring later on for different blood lines or something, cause I'm sure lots of people would like these guys. I sense they will be very 'hot' this coming year, I don't like to use that term, but unfortunately live animals do go through fads, just like the uroplatus not too long ago, where the hell did they go?
Anyways, I want to know something....Did you get that damn ambilobe yet???????????????????????????????????????????
-Brock
meow_mix450
07-25-03, 09:32 AM
lol ya i think more people are getting intrested in these little guys
meow_mix450
07-26-03, 06:29 PM
Are there books on these guys on how to care for these guys??? i only kno some websites that have good caresheets ike the one trace gave but i was just wondering if u see books for these guys thanks
There's some discussion going on at the KS chameleon forum right now, we are trying to figure out why so many females die prior to or before laying eggs.
-Brock
Charm_Paradise
07-26-03, 07:26 PM
Trace-
There has been allot of death this past month in the female R. brevicaudatus, Trace you are not alone. Allot of people on KS forum that keep them or started to keep them have lost females even a CB from the Kammers. I have not had any problems with my Ulu's (knock on wood), but there was someone who's female Ulu died with 16 eggs inside. Any thoughts on what is going on?
meow_mix450
07-26-03, 07:45 PM
O wow did any of those 16 eggs make it???
Again, I'm behind on this thread as well, so I will answer all of the questions at once!
Brock: Yes, we should start a PPC! That would be a most interesting project to be involved in. Contact me! Good luck with finding some at the Red Deer show, I'm sure there will be a few. You are first on the list on people to contact when my babies get a little bigger and I feel they are old enough to be sold. I do not want to let them go at too young of age as they are extremely fragile at the moment. As for prices of my babies... I'm not sure yet... I paid about $50.00 each for the adults, so I'm sure the babies will be in that ballpark range. I can not comment on the Ambilobe issue as of yet, but I will have my pair by the end of the year.
Meow: The only good book I have on pygmy species is: Chameleons: Natures Hidden Jewels by Petr Necas. ISBN: 1-57524-137-4. I paid about $80.00CAN for the book and it is my chameleon bible. Well worth the expensive price tag IMHO.
John & Brock: Well I just lost the last of my 5 females about 10 minutes ago! GRRRR :confused: All of my females from the original group have died on me within the last week or so. I wonder if there is some sort of virus or something going on with the WC brevs this year? Odd. I do not read the KS forums but I may have to look into the threads there just to see what's going on. I have done necropsies on a few of them and really haven't discovered anything wrong internally, and I will cut open this last female and look inside too. I'll let everyone know if I see anything weird.
Cheers!
Trace
Trace, how much were you feeding them, and what were you supplementing them with? I personally think these deaths are caused by over feeding or a lack of or overdose of supplements, or simply giving them supplements they don't need. Like a creature is dependant on the chemical makeup of a certain food source while that same chemical makeup is lethal to another creature.
Or were there any tiny tiny white bugs crawling around? Take a very very close look at your enclosure to see if there are any white things crawling around, some of the people on KS mentioned they saw white things crawling around, they said they were harmless but it could be some sort of parasite.
There's going to be quite a bit of research going on with these guys in the near future, since the chameleon community is clueless as to why their females are dying abruptly (usually after laying eggs). If we don't find a cause, people will be put off by the fact that females have a high death rate in captivity and no one will want to buy them.
The PPC wouldn't take that long, since it is to my understanding they lay clutches every 2 months after reaching sexual maturity. The problem is getting to the bottom of why the females are dying.
What all did you feed them? Someone brought up that they eat termites in the wild, and that some enzyme helps with digestion. Being on the forest floor, I'm sure they have developed some kind of dependancy on a certain insect since there are so very many in the leaf litter of the jungles. Just like the Molluch horridus from Australia (thorny devil), they ONLY eat ants, or the various arrow frogs who are only poisonous if they eat a certain ant that eats a certan toxic plant.
I'm really anxious to get to the bottom of the mystery of the death of the female pygmies. Having lost 5, I suggest you go to KS and type up your experiences and husbandry techniques. I know KS isn't a very friendly place sometimes and understand why you may not go there, but this is for the greater good. It's very strange that you lost them all in such a short ammount of time, very very very strange. Of course they were WC and it was most likely a parasite, but it's strange that it took as long as it did and they were all basically in synch with each other.
Could also be the summer weather.....Craig Goldie lost a few of his montane species last summer when there was a heat wave here in BC. It might be wise to 'winterize' them over the summer so they aren't exposed to any tempurature fluxuations. I really am clueless as to what a cause could be. This is so frustrating.
If I were to get one from you it would probably have to be shipped via airplane, and I really don't have a good feeling sending a terrestrial chameleon into high elevation for any ammount of time, especially the pygmies which are fragile to that kind of thing. I wonder if you could send it with someone to the Red Deer show if you know anyone going. I'll e-mail you tomorrow when I'm not so tired (2:20am). *YAWN* All this damn pygmy talk has my brain working so that I can't sleep.
-Brock
Hey Brock! :D
Yeah, I'm pretty ticked right now! This whole thing has gotten me quite stumped. I was having the best luck with these guys for the past few months and losing the 5 females in such a short time is EXTREMELY puzzling. All of my females have died AFTER laying their eggs so it wasn't a dystocia issue here. I did do a necropsy on the female last night and didn't really see anything spectacular, much like the necropsies on the other females I had. I did notice that this one did have a slightly enlarged liver and I think I will send the liver off for Histopathology just to rule out any problems there. No parasites that I could see, but any chameleons I get (WC or CB) are dewormed immediately upon arrival here.
I have gone through and read most of the discussions on KS about it now, but I do find that forum a little ummmm hard to read sometimes. (Holy, politically correct statement there Batman!) After I posted here last night, I noticed the subject has been started on some the chameleon email lists that I belong to so I'll definately get involved on those threads and tell my experiences about it. I still may join KS today as well, although it will almost pain me to do so, but as you say, it's for the greater good, and the more information chameleon owners have, particularly about some of these new(ish) species to the pet trade will be beneficial to all of us in the long run.
As for the food... I was primarily giving them 1/4" crickets, as this is the easiest bugs for me to get on a regular basis, but I did use small silkworms and fruit flies as well, so their diet is varied. I would supplement once a week alternatively with calcium and reptivite. I noticed you addressed me and the issue of overfeeding on the KS forums, and I don't want to give you the impression that I would feed my guys a 1000 crix a week, but I would buy that many bugs on a weekly basis as I find most of them come in dead anyways and I also can't be bothered to keep them alive. I pay less for a box of crickets then I would pay somebody (or myself) to keep them alive. That being said, I am probably guilty of overfeeding around here anyways. None of my chameleons are overweight by any stretch, but they certainly do not want for bugs! Interesting thoughts on your part though for their need for certain insects for proper health. This would not surprise me if they did require only grubs or termites or the like. I guess through further captive husbandry will we find out these details. Just because I've had some set-backs with this species, will not give up on them though. I do find them fascinating to work with. They are sssooo different than the arboreal species that I also work with.
Lastly, I did consider where you lived when I typed my answer about selling my babies to you and the long ship times to the west coast from Ontario is troublesome to me as well. Not that I don't want to sell to you, but I'm hoping that you will find some closer to you, just to save the stress of shipping on these little guys. You have shown an interest in them though and I am happy to keep you on the top of my list if you are unsuccessful in your bid to find some out west. We can certainly discuss details at a later date. All I'm going to say at this point... I'm MORE than determined to make sure these babies I have now and the eggs I'm incubating make it!
I look forward to an email from you.
Cheers!
Trace
Hey! Me again!
I got to thinking, and yes it hurt and I've come up with a few thoughts.
First of I'll explain what I do for the folks that don't know me that well before I get into the point of this post. As my signature says, I'm addicted to chameleons and quite honestly I'm getting a little bored of the Veileds and Panthers that are so prevalent in the pet hobby these days. No offense to any of those owners as I have more than a few of each of those species, and probably always will. Being in Canada, I'm always envious of our American friends who have access to some of the weirder species of chameleons, both WC and more importantly CB animals. At this point, for me to be able to work with the species that I want to, I'm sort of stuck with getting the WC imports, although I always prefer a CB animal any day. Please don't argue with me about the ethical ramifications of WC animals, I know them, this is not the point of this post. Being that Canada is a smaller market for chameleons, and breeders of the weirder species are few and far between, WC animals is what I have to do most times. I'm hoping that within the next year or two I will have the financial and political (I can't think of the proper word, sorry) means to be able to import some CB animals from the US. Maybe I have a romantised view of what I do, but I would really like to see more of the weirder species of chameleons available in Canada and I want to see them being CB animals, and if I have to start with some WC animals to get the program started, I will.
Now to the point of this post. I have acquired a number of WC chameleons from Tanzania within the last few months. (R. brevicaudatus, R. temporalis and B. tavetanum to name a few) None of these chameleons have done well in my care. I started with 15 animals and now I am down to 1! I lost the last B. tavetanum this morning! He was fine... eating well, poops normal, he was a regular healthy chameleon yesterday. All my WC animals are quarantined here, dewormed, vet checked etc etc. My husbandry is good, I've been working with reptiles for longer than some of you guys have been alive, so I don't think there are any issues with that. So is it a coincidence that none of the Tanzania animals have done well for me? It most likely is, and I've just had more than my share of bad luck recently, or is there something going on in Tanzania that we don't know about? Any thoughts?
Cheers!
Trace
meow_mix450
07-27-03, 12:17 PM
Well i have a thought or u can say a guess....pigmy's chameleon only come from tanzania well thats wut i have heard...i havnt heard that they come from any other country so mayb they dont do so well in other country's cause of the weather...and im guessing that that there isnt much in canada cause most of them die in a month or 2 just a guess...it would be great if other people can tell us how there reptile from tanzania are doing that would be great so then we might have a clue to wut is going on here or in tanzania and im gonna check how there weather is like in tanzania and post you people wut i have found cause i think its the weather problem but thats my guess any of ur guess are as good
meow_mix450
07-27-03, 12:48 PM
o i just forgot u ask one question is CB do better in canada??? or is WC better?
Meow, for your sake, as you have not owned a chameleon yet, look for a captive born (CB) or captive bred and born (CBB) animal. Generally they are more acclimated to life in captivity and a little easier to deal with. Don't get yourself into the headaches of wild caught (WC) animals like I am doing until you have a bit more experience. No offense meant by that last statement please! They are difficult to handle and require too much money and time to get them healthy and thriving in a captive environment.
Hope this helps.
Trace
meow_mix450
07-27-03, 01:06 PM
None taken ya i understand im gonna start with a CB before i think about WC:D
15 animals all dead? Now that is something very odd, there's usually a few who pull through. There could be something going on in Tanzania, a reptile plague or something, or it could be like mad cow disease (my grandma said that mad cow disease has an incubation time inside the host of a certain [cant remember] ammount of time), and it is like a time bomb inside of them waiting to take over and kill them.
So they WERE gravid before they died, that's interesting, I wasn't sure before. Because all the people's whose died on the KS forums died after laying eggs as well. That is most interesting. Even a guy who had his female Rh. brevi for a year with no male died, as he was cleaning out the cage he found a tiny baby on one of the plants. This indicates they can store sperm for very very long ammounts of time as well, but it also adds to the problem that they die after laying eggs. Like some salmon do (I should know, I had to go to the salmon run all the time with school, it was interesting the first time, but after that you just got sick of the damn smell).
You probably read my post about longevity not being a selected trait in the pygmies, but reproduction definately being one. The more I read about how the females died after egg laying, the more I'm starting to believe that theory. Reproduce, die; and it's just that simple. Perhaps they need a certain ammount of food, or a certain change in environment after they lay eggs to recover from it, or it's just simply their life mission to lay some eggs so the species can survive. I wonder if it's a cosmic energy causing worldwide death of Rh. brevi females, where's Superman when you need him...
I'm also extremely envious, sometimes causing insanity, of our American neighbours and their vast selection of chameleons. Bastards...:D But, I would also like to see a wider selection of the more strange chameleons in Canada as well. Hopefully in the next 5 years or so I can help you with the importing of CB animals from the US, Canada has such a depressing selection of quality animals. I'm glad to see you are taking the initiative and being a pioneer to aid in the conservation by captive propagation (sorry whoever's signature that is) trend that I hope to see broadened over the next decade.
-Brock
Trace I was going to e-mail you, but I guess this will benefit the whole group.
Alanvines from KS posted that some scientists in Europe just discovered a new form of an old coccidia parasite (see quote below). They tested the stools of 10 Rh. temporalis, endemic to Tanzania (Usambra). He said it needs more research, but I was just talking to Beth Wallbank about coccidia, and I see her as one of the leading authorities on herp advice since she keeps and breeds over 300 herps. This is what she had to say.
I told her the situation of all the female pygmy chameleons dying after laying eggs, and she said that coccidia strikes when the immune system is down. She then stated that egg laying is very hard on the immune system and causes it to temporarily 'crash', this would be good reason as to why the females are dying after egg laying, while the healthy males are still around. As far as I know, there have been no stool checks for coccidia from any of the people who have had their pygmies die. Beth also said that coccidia is an extremely contageous parasite and will spread to any chameleon you come in contact with after touching an infected animal. Then she added that it was contageous to humans. She said it will strike when your immune system is down, i.e. a bad cut, the flu, or a heavy period. She said that coccidia is definately transferred to eggs, and the babies have a high chance of dying after hatching (but Trace's seem to be doing fine). Beth said there was treatment, fenbenezole, but harsh, panacur, and small amounts of ivumectin, ( but has been know to kill herps). Of course, any treatment on such a tiny creature could ultimately be lethal and costly.
So, until there is further research on the deaths of the captive Rh. spp in North America, or until other chams get sick and the coccidia strikes, or until some keepers get sick and the coccidia strikes, we won't know for sure that this is a nation wide case of coccidia.
The fact that Beth mentioned that the female's immune system is deprived during and after egg laying, and that the males are fine (obviously because their immune systems must be in check), leads me to believe that coccidia is indeed the cause. And Trace, your other WC animals could have had their immune systems shocked while you were treating them for worms and had them on special care in quarintine, triggering the coccidia to take affect. I would have a few or all of your chameleons, as well as yourself, checked medically for any trace of coccidia, and if you have any stools that are less than 48 hours old, take them to a vet immediately to get them checked for coccidia.
Beth said she hears you are immaculate with your hygene, and she is optimistic for you.
Quote:
Posted by: alanvines at Sun Jul 27 13:54:25 2003 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ]
Modry et al from the department of Parasitology, University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Brno, Czech Republic have discovered a new Coccidian parasite from pygmy chameleons. In their study, the investigators searched the stools of 10 pygmy chameleons, Rampholeon temporalis, endemic to the Usambara Mountains region in northeastern Tanzania, for coccidian parasites.
The investigators have named the new species as Eimeria hajeki. They describe the sporulated oocysts of Eimeria hajeki n. sp. to be oval with a shape index (length/width) of 1.3 (1.2-1.4) and a 2-microm-thick rough, bilayered wall. The investigators have further reported the micropyle and polar granule to be absent in E.hajeki.
End Quote.
- A Very Concerned Brock
GGGGGRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!
I was typing up a rather nice reply to your first post when I got notification of another reply to this thread! Needless to say. I'm in shock now!
Yes, my hygiene and quarantine practices are immaculate, but sometimes mistakes can happen... so it looks like I'll be spending my next few days collecting poops from ALL of my chameleons here and running back and forth from my vet getting specific tests run. As much as this new information is disappointing and scary, this is something I must do, as I do not need an outbreak of coccidia here. It would certainly explain the troubles I've had with the WC imports in the last few months. I am also fortunate that I still have the WC male R. brevicaudatus and I'm going to be looking for his poop first. Of course I have spent the day (as I do everyday) cleaning all of my chameleon enclosures and I have to wait until tomorrow for some fresh poops from all my woggley-eyed friends. It's funny you bring this up... I tend to deworm my collection twice a year whether they need it or not, and I was considering starting the treatments this week so this is more impetus to do that.
Thank for the heads up Brock! Thanks as well for the support of my crazy idea of breeding the weird species here. If everything goes well, I'm hoping that things will be set-up financially for me to have it started within 2 years, but if you want to help at some point in the future, I would be more than agreeable to that.
Cheers!
Trace
Ahahaha sorry, but I read this forum before I read the KS forum, so I had to share the news immediately after.
Yeah this coccidia issue, if it is indeed the case, will need a lot of work to overcome. Especially with the way some exporters ship the chameleons all in one crate and the contagiousness of the parasite.
I'd be more than happy to help with the chameleon breeding, although I think I should finish school first and get a job. I'm only 17 remember. Hopefully I will have a nice breeding colony of lots of different things and I will have equal or greater status than the Kammers. HA! Take that Kammers! I want to eventually make some profit from these guys, or at least break even with what I spend so it is a self-supporting hobby. I'm sure that will take a lot of time and money to get to that point though.
Goodluck with the tests and let me know how it goes.
-Brock
Collide
07-27-03, 11:52 PM
Hi
Wow what can i say these poor things are getting the short end of the stick here.
I have also reciently lost a female, as well as a male. I have one female left.
I have been doing a lot of thinking and thought that since she is now in a way oversized enclosure and all alone, that mabey she might want to move to Ottawa.
Trace I was wondering if u wanted to take her I trust your cappible hands and well I am now feeling that I cant help her if she needs it. Well she seems to be very healthy, but all alone and I would feel better if she were with a male to make babys to help learn about these guys. So well not sure but if your interested let me know. Im very confused as to why these guys died on me and with no vets willing to help mabey the little cutie would be better off with u.
On A side note: I have notived those tiny little white bugs in the soil like you mentioned in your post above. I have been looking for some thing to get rid of them that was not toxic.
Interesting, the little white bugs could also be a parasite that is passed on to eggs. Because that is wierd that you would have them and people in the states would have the exact same things. Trace did you check your enclosure for these white things? Collide maybe you could stick some in an air-tight bag and send them to a vet for analysis, or send them to someone who can take them to an experienced vet.
-Brock
meow_mix450
07-28-03, 07:49 AM
Well i dont have any chameleons at all but my dad use to grow and took care of plants and when sometimes i have to water for him i would see these litttle white bugs running around.......i dunno if that will help but ya....
Morning everyone! :D
Wow Collide! That is a wonderful offer on your part! I can't thank you enough! I will take her. My prime reasons are as follows:
A: I would still like to breed this species. Despite the set-backs I've had, I'm not the type of person to give up.
B: In light of the recent studies on parasites in the R. temporalis chameleons, and the fact that she is still alive, I would use her as a test case first for the coccidia parasite. Now I beleive that she came on a different shipment from Tanzania than mine did, but for general interest for everyone involved with this species, she is going to be a guinea pig for further studies.
As much as my male is lonely and pacing his cage looking for his "ladies", she is going to be quarantined far from him to avoid any possible contamination that may be happening here. We'll hook up on MSN today and discuss the details about payment and shipping etc.
And Brock... I have 2 set-ups of pygmy chameleons here, the R. brevicaudatus and the R. temporalis and neither of the tanks have those little white bugs of which you speak. When I went purchase the dirt required for them, I went for a more expensive, quality bag of dirt for my animals as I have seen those white bugs in the soil of my houseplants here. (I use cheap dirt for my plants) As Meow has indicated, I think those bugs are specific to the dirt, more than a parasite brought in on WC animals, so I don't think they are anything to worry about. I will pursue this line of thinking later on in the day and contact some of my plant buddies and report back.
It's getting late, I've finished my coffee now and it's time to call my vet and figure out a plan of attack here.
Cheers!
Trace
dank7oo
07-28-03, 12:15 PM
boy was i behind on things ... i am ashamed of myself
this really sucks, and i honestly feel horrible for the peopel who ahve lost chams ... i know i have grown awfully faund of mine, and couldnt ever picture loosing one.
as for ichiro? i know that you are very busy trace, and i wont get into that, but do you want me to find another home for him? i may be going to toronto this weekend afterall, and am very busy gettting things up and running for my pantehr, and i need the space ichiro is in ...
just lemme know if you still want him, but i will understand if you dont, becasue i know right now you are looking out for your other guys
email me or post here, i will be checking regularly
best of luck for all of you
Jason
Hey Folks!
Well I have good news and bad news. Good news... my chams fecals came back clean for pinworms, tapeworms and the like... bad news... I have coccidia here. GRRR! I now have the meds to treat it effectively and I'm not too concerned about it at this point. My collection is healthy and I caught it in time.
I'm posting my findings, which are NOT scientific by any stretch, but I'm hoping that someone out there will learn from my bad experiences, so here it goes!
Normally my chameleons poop like clockwork, you can set your watch to it! Yesterday when I actually needed poops from everyone... do you think they would poop? NO! Buggers. Out of the 20 chameleons that I currently own, I got 5 fresh poop samples yesterday. Out of those 5 poops, only 1 animal tested positive for coccidia. Now that isn't saying much, as the coccidia parasite may not have been shed in the other 4 samples. Because of the 1 definate case that I have, we are treating everyone here. I should point out that I had an interesting cross sampling of poops... as in some came from WC animals and some came from CBB animals. Also the sampling of poops came from both the quarantine room and some came from my regular collection.
Now here is the points to ponder about this:
1: We have not narrowed down the point of entry of coccidia into my collection. It most likely came from those WC Tanzania animals, but we will never know this for certain.
2: The animal that did test positive for the parasite is a CBB animal who lives in my quarantine room. She is not technically my animal... I'm rehabbing her for a friend of mine. She has been previously vet checked (twice) since her arrival here, although we did not do any fecals. She had other, more important, health issues to deal with first. In hindsight we should have done fecals. Did she bring the coccidia into my house? Is it localized just to her?
3: For the most part, I'm the only one that has access to my animals, but I do live with 2 other people that have reptiles themselves. Has it been brought in by them? Is it in their collection? Both of those people work with animals themselves outside of the house... could they have brought it home from work?
4: In discussions with some medical staff here... there has been a marked increase of coccidia in the general animal population here in Ottawa. Could I have petted my neighbours dog and brought it in? Is there something "fishy" happening in my drinking water at the moment?
5: My crickets and other feeder insects... could they be coming from a place that is infected by coccidia?
So there are too many variables happening here for me to say we chameleon owners DEFINATELY have a problem with animals coming from Tanzania at this point. I should also point out that the coccidia found here was not the same type as the German findings that Brock pointed out. I'm lucky too, my vet is very interested in learning about this new problem, so I'm forwarding off links to all of the websites I have read including this one that started it all, to him. He and I will never solve the problem here, but maybe we will be one step closer to the solution. Any knowledge is good right?
I'm also going to say, now matter how stringent your quarantine methods are, there is always room for improvement on them, as I have found out in the last 24-48 hours. Unfortunately I have a roomie living in my third bedroom at the moment and he is only here for the summer. When he leaves, I'm turning that room into a HIGH quarantine area that I will only have access too. I will also have an area for animals that don't really need to be quarantined persay, but maybe aren't quite ready for my general population yet. Frequent vet checks are always a must.
That's my story, it's unfortunate that it's happening, but I decided to post it in the hopes that people will read this and learn from it. I sure have! I'm off for now... I've got animals to weigh... meds to give and cages that need disinfecting! GRRR! I've got my work cut out for me for the next week.
Have fun with your herps everybody! :D
Trace
FINALLY!!! All my guys just got their last dose of the coccidia meds today! YEE-HA! I even managed to get the little pygmy chameleons medicated as well. Now that was a treat trying to figure out a proper doseage of a strong medication when they only weigh 4 grams! :/
Unfortunately I did lose one chameleon through all of this, (RIP Mr. Fischer Too) but so far the rest of the posse seems to be doing ok, beyond the fact that they all hate me now. Some are off their food a bit and some have loose stools. Both are side effects of the medicine and hopefully will clear up within the next few days.
I'll have their fecals rechecked next week and hopefully all will be clean. I must say, I've had enough of daily washing and disinfecting cages and cage furniture in the last week to last me a lifetime thanks.
Cheers!
Trace
NOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NOT MR. FISCHER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Glad to hear you got everything under control, but I'm so sad to hear about Mr. Fischer, I love fischerii so much. They are in my top 5 favourite mountainous species.
-Brock
Just to clarify, it wasn't this "Mr. Fischer" that I lost:
http://www.ssnakess.com/photopost/data/500/405109-0988-thumb.jpg
He's one of the stars of the collection here, and I would be heartbroken if it was him. Not that the other male Fischers wasn't special, but he wasn't as personable maybe as the original Mr. Fischer.
Brock, they are fun to work with and one of my favorites as well, maybe because they are just a little different than the Jackson's group. I've also found that there was a lot of Fischers around in the past few years, but I'm having some troubles locating a few nice females this year. Ah well... hopefully one will come my way soon enough.
Cheers!
Trace
meow_mix450
08-05-03, 02:25 PM
srry to hear about ur loss:( well good luck on finding a female
meow_mix450
10-23-03, 08:50 PM
Hey i just wanted to bring this topic up again. I found it very intresting, and was wondering how everyones Beareded Pygmy's chameleons. Just really intrested. Dont worry not planning to get one lol, it would be kool though, dont think im up for it yet.
Trace: Hows the babys???Planning on getting anymore of these guys???
Meow
Wow... Does anyone have a picture of the chameleon? and i noticed that trace, you have them in a glass tank? is this better then screen? because after my panther moves out of the small on i will have an extra cage!
meow_mix450
10-24-03, 09:58 AM
Hey Geofft In Trace's gallery she has picks of her bearded pygmy chameleon, i think im not sure
Meow
Meow: I don't have any of these guys left. As I stated in this thread, all of my females died suddenly on me this past summer, and the male finally passed away on me a few weeks ago. Oh well. They do have a fairly short life span in capivity. Mine were also wild caught as well. Certainly I would like more of these guys, I've still have the tank set-up! I haven't seen any for sale in months.
Geoff: Somewhere on this thread I gave a link for a caresheet on the R. brevicaudatus. Page 1 maybe? Yes, they can live in a tank and yes they can live communally, meaning one male and several females can live together without too much stress. They are not arboreal so you don't need the height that other larger chameleons need. Here is a pic. There are others in my gallery.
http://www.ssnakess.com/photopost/data/500/405119-1908-med.jpg
Cheers!
Trace
Collide
10-24-03, 08:23 PM
still got my lone female she is a pig i swear, poor girl all alone. Mine is wild caught as well I lost one male and one female. the one i have still I have had for wow ummm lol time flys 9 months or soo mabey more not sure.
Oh trace did those egges of the brevs die or u still got them??
http://www.ssnakess.com/photopost/data/500/2468Image023.jpg
that's a chubby little *******.
meow_mix450
10-25-03, 09:12 PM
Hmmm its just a thought, maybe we should try and get these species here, since there is so little, and we only have panthers and veiled....it would pretty kool to add another type of speices here, maby at the next show we can see if vendors can get them some how, and see what we can do. But this is just a thought, cause i find them very intresting
Meow
I would definately be interested in aquiring a pair or trio to set up for breeding. They are a very intriguing family. I'd really like to get my hands on some Brookesia, but with all things great, money is required :S.
-Brock
meow_mix450
10-27-03, 04:13 PM
ya thats the problem these days money:(
Meow
khameleon
10-28-03, 02:38 PM
Those white things that are in the soil are probably springtails.
I actually use them to feed baby dart frogs with it.
As for more pygmy chams available, there are at least two people in Toronto who have them for sale. PM/email me if you're interested.
Robert
meow_mix450
10-28-03, 04:53 PM
OMG are you serious, PM Trace she might be intrested!!! Are they wild caught by any chance?
Meow
LMAO Meow... I've already sent a PM to khameleon about them! I hope he/she sees it soon and gets back to me! I can hardly wait to find out.
Cheers!
Trace
meow_mix450
10-28-03, 05:00 PM
LOL!!!! Wow im just really excited lol, Keep us posted to see what happens lol
Meow
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.