Aardwolf
Well-Known Member
There is probably no group of reptiles that I can think of which fascinate the public so much, and yet are so seldom encountered in zoos, than the chameleons. Compared to all of the other major groups of lizards – geckos and iguanas, monitors and skinks – these lizards are relatively scarce, and yet every visitor knows them and loves them. Even with all of the diverse reptiles I’ve worked with over the years, I’ve only worked with two species of chameleon at a single zoo.
The chameleons in question were two panthers and a veiled – all males, all living in the reptile house of a large AZA zoo. The lizards were kept in a series of tall glass enclosures in the lobby of the building, each exhibit in a row, jutting out of the wall, with one chameleon per cage (there were actually four exhibits, one was empty). The panthers were on opposite ends of the row, with the veiled and the empty cage in the middle. Each cage was a densely-planted tangle of vines and branches, with heat and light at the top. The arrangement allowed the lizards to thermoregulate fairly effectively, as they could go up to get warm, down to keep cooler. Though I often hear the virtues of screened-in enclosures extolled for chameleons, these ones were glassed-in.
Water bowls were at the bottom of the enclosures, but to be honest I think those were more for the visitors and their peace of mind than for the animals. The chameleons received their moisture through constant mistings – there was a drip system, but I don’t recall it working particularly well, so I was constantly misting and spraying the chameleons. Sometimes when I would do morning checks, I wouldn’t be able to find a chameleon. After a quick glance at the floor of the enclosure – to make sure it wasn’t lying there – I’d start misting, and sure enough, the missing chameleon would soon appear in the middle of the spray of water.
It was important that the two panther chameleons be kept out of visual contact with one another, lest they stress each other out, hence their being kept at the opposite ends of the row (neither really seemed to react to the veiled). Being a new keeper, I took all of the instructions of my curator very seriously, to the point that if I had to take one panther to the back of the reptile house, perhaps for a weighing or something, I’d walk the animal all the way around the building so it didn’t have to pass by its rival.

Chameleons are best known for their changes in colors, though I didn’t often see them do that – perhaps because husbandry, temperature, and environment were fairly consistent, so they didn’t often feel the need to. I was frequently asked by visitors if I could pull out a chameleon and put it on their shirts to watch it instantly change to match the color and pattern of what they were wearing, and was forced to disappoint many of them by explaining that it wasn’t actually how that worked, that I couldn’t walk a chameleon across a checkerboard and let them see it turn to red and black squares. Besides, chameleons, unlike some other lizards I’ve worked with, especially iguanas and varanids, often seem to dislike handling, so I tried to minimize hands-on disturbances of them.
The one time that I would try to handle them a bit was during feedings. The exhibits of the chameleons were front opening, which meant that when I was servicing them, they were open to the lobby and the visitor area, giving visitors not only a great view, with no glass in the way (the glass was often a bit smeary as a result of all of the misting), but a keeper front and center to ask question. We primarily fed crickets and superworms, held several inches in front of the chameleons, then slowly backed away. The chameleons would fix the insect in sight with their turret-like eyes, engage in slow, stealthy approach, and then, very slowly, open their mouths a bit and aim. By the time the tongue would finally flick out, the visitors were usually all waiting with bated breath, and more than one clapped when the strike finally came. Usually I fed the chameleon while it was still in the branches, but sometimes one would climb out onto my arm and let me take it a little further into the lobby for feeding so more visitors could see.
One of my supervisors told me that when he was a young keeper, his favorite trick was to place a (live) cricket between his lips for the chameleon to flick up with his tongue. He assured me that it was a great way to impress good-looking female visitors, though looking back on this now as a somewhat jaded adult, I’m not sure why I ever believed that. This may have all been some sort of elaborate hazing, now that I think about it. Anyway, I was determined to give it a try, and for the next week weeks, every time I tried to feed the chameleons, I would pop a cricket into my mouth and give it a go. The chameleon would actually go for it maybe one time out of ten… which meant that the other nine times, I was standing there like a dummy with a live bug in my lips. Good-looking female visitors were, at least on those occasions, unimpressed.
Chameleons have a reputation for being very delicate animals, which explains perhaps why they aren’t as popular as one would expect in zoos (but fails to explain why every pet store I’ve ever been to seems to had a sad-looking Jackson’s or veiled chameleon for sale). These aren’t the first animals I’ve come across which have a reputation of “poor doers” that scares off many folks. They aren’t an actual rarity per se, but I’m still surprised at how rarely I see them, and how many major reptile collections I’ve been to lack a single species. It’s true that they can be easily stressed, have more exacting habitat requirements than many other lizards, and, in the eyes of some visitors, may be something of a disappointment, failing to live up to they hype of how they are expected to behave. Still, I think that chameleons are some of the most charismatic and unique of lizards, and worthy of a little more consideration in zoos.
The chameleons in question were two panthers and a veiled – all males, all living in the reptile house of a large AZA zoo. The lizards were kept in a series of tall glass enclosures in the lobby of the building, each exhibit in a row, jutting out of the wall, with one chameleon per cage (there were actually four exhibits, one was empty). The panthers were on opposite ends of the row, with the veiled and the empty cage in the middle. Each cage was a densely-planted tangle of vines and branches, with heat and light at the top. The arrangement allowed the lizards to thermoregulate fairly effectively, as they could go up to get warm, down to keep cooler. Though I often hear the virtues of screened-in enclosures extolled for chameleons, these ones were glassed-in.
Water bowls were at the bottom of the enclosures, but to be honest I think those were more for the visitors and their peace of mind than for the animals. The chameleons received their moisture through constant mistings – there was a drip system, but I don’t recall it working particularly well, so I was constantly misting and spraying the chameleons. Sometimes when I would do morning checks, I wouldn’t be able to find a chameleon. After a quick glance at the floor of the enclosure – to make sure it wasn’t lying there – I’d start misting, and sure enough, the missing chameleon would soon appear in the middle of the spray of water.
It was important that the two panther chameleons be kept out of visual contact with one another, lest they stress each other out, hence their being kept at the opposite ends of the row (neither really seemed to react to the veiled). Being a new keeper, I took all of the instructions of my curator very seriously, to the point that if I had to take one panther to the back of the reptile house, perhaps for a weighing or something, I’d walk the animal all the way around the building so it didn’t have to pass by its rival.

Chameleons are best known for their changes in colors, though I didn’t often see them do that – perhaps because husbandry, temperature, and environment were fairly consistent, so they didn’t often feel the need to. I was frequently asked by visitors if I could pull out a chameleon and put it on their shirts to watch it instantly change to match the color and pattern of what they were wearing, and was forced to disappoint many of them by explaining that it wasn’t actually how that worked, that I couldn’t walk a chameleon across a checkerboard and let them see it turn to red and black squares. Besides, chameleons, unlike some other lizards I’ve worked with, especially iguanas and varanids, often seem to dislike handling, so I tried to minimize hands-on disturbances of them.
The one time that I would try to handle them a bit was during feedings. The exhibits of the chameleons were front opening, which meant that when I was servicing them, they were open to the lobby and the visitor area, giving visitors not only a great view, with no glass in the way (the glass was often a bit smeary as a result of all of the misting), but a keeper front and center to ask question. We primarily fed crickets and superworms, held several inches in front of the chameleons, then slowly backed away. The chameleons would fix the insect in sight with their turret-like eyes, engage in slow, stealthy approach, and then, very slowly, open their mouths a bit and aim. By the time the tongue would finally flick out, the visitors were usually all waiting with bated breath, and more than one clapped when the strike finally came. Usually I fed the chameleon while it was still in the branches, but sometimes one would climb out onto my arm and let me take it a little further into the lobby for feeding so more visitors could see.
One of my supervisors told me that when he was a young keeper, his favorite trick was to place a (live) cricket between his lips for the chameleon to flick up with his tongue. He assured me that it was a great way to impress good-looking female visitors, though looking back on this now as a somewhat jaded adult, I’m not sure why I ever believed that. This may have all been some sort of elaborate hazing, now that I think about it. Anyway, I was determined to give it a try, and for the next week weeks, every time I tried to feed the chameleons, I would pop a cricket into my mouth and give it a go. The chameleon would actually go for it maybe one time out of ten… which meant that the other nine times, I was standing there like a dummy with a live bug in my lips. Good-looking female visitors were, at least on those occasions, unimpressed.
Chameleons have a reputation for being very delicate animals, which explains perhaps why they aren’t as popular as one would expect in zoos (but fails to explain why every pet store I’ve ever been to seems to had a sad-looking Jackson’s or veiled chameleon for sale). These aren’t the first animals I’ve come across which have a reputation of “poor doers” that scares off many folks. They aren’t an actual rarity per se, but I’m still surprised at how rarely I see them, and how many major reptile collections I’ve been to lack a single species. It’s true that they can be easily stressed, have more exacting habitat requirements than many other lizards, and, in the eyes of some visitors, may be something of a disappointment, failing to live up to they hype of how they are expected to behave. Still, I think that chameleons are some of the most charismatic and unique of lizards, and worthy of a little more consideration in zoos.














