U have a cat??Well for variety my cat loves chams. He just cant get enough of pygmys. He gets bored of mice and cat food. I thought I would vary his diet a bit.
If only pygmy chams were as common as the brown anoles around here, I'm sure that would be fine. I feed anoles to my chickens all the time.Well for variety my cat loves chams. He just cant get enough of pygmys. He gets bored of mice and cat food. I thought I would vary his diet a bit.
Probably not very, but there's definately some nutrition in there or else the mantid wouldn't be walking. It's crazy if you actually want them to make up more than 1% of a chameleons diet, but a single brood of nymphs is just fine for the sake of variety, personal enjoyment, something different, or just the random oppurtinity presneting itself in the form of you happening upon a cheap ooth at your local hardware store with a spare 5$ bill you wouldn't mind sacrificing.U have a cat??
Thing is, how nutritious is a thin, newly hatched tenodera that hasn't even eaten yet?
Really I import my chams real cheap. 1 buck an egg. My cat especially loves watching them hatch then gobbling them up.But lets get really here. Newly hatched tenodera have about as much nutritional value as a glass of water and whose to say a cham can tell the difference between a mantis and a cricket. All it comes down to is weather or not a cham breeder likes to see a cham tackle a mantis or not.If only pygmy chams were as common as the brown anoles around here, I'm sure that would be fine. I feed anoles to my chickens all the time.
But do you see the problem in your logic here? A single pygmy - 30$+ OR A couple hundred mantids 4$-5$ from the local hardware store, or free if you can find them. Feeding mantids to chams is not bad at all, it's just comes down to personal opinions and whether it is financially logical.
Until a study is actually done on newly hatched tenodera nutrition (Like that'll happen) you really can't say much, but you do have a point. You really can't compare using T. sinesis nymphs as feeders to using chams as feeders. As far as you importing pygmies goes, I'd like to buy some eggs off you!Really I import my chams real cheap. 1 buck an egg. My cat especially loves watching them hatch then gobbling them up.
But lets get really here. Newly hatched tenodera have about as much nutritional value as a glass of water and whose to say a cham can tell the difference between a mantis and a cricket. All it comes down to is weather or not a cham breeder likes to see a cham tackle a mantis or not.
(cracks knuckles) I better get to work than...Until a study is actually done on newly hatched tenodera nutrition (Like that'll happen)
Nope, it's only wrong because you're wasting your own money lol. Not our problem though.I feed freshly hatched chams to my mantids, is that wrong?
I know, sarcasim is hard to notice over the internet.Haha i was only kidding, love the reactions though!
Live a little (just kidding).I know what you mean though it can be annoying at times but it usually helps diffuse the situation in my opinion.you know you may be kidding but some people such as myself do not like sarcasm as it is almost like the boy crying wolf and no one believed him once the wolf really was seen and alot of people get pissed off when being put into sarcasm situations and I am one of those!
:sweatdrop:you know you may be kidding but some people such as myself do not like sarcasm as it is almost like the boy crying wolf and no one believed him once the wolf really was seen and alot of people get pissed off when being put into sarcasm situations and I am one of those!
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