Advice for a malnourished dragon
Hey all. I've been off the forum for quite some time, due to a busy schedule at school, blah blah blah. Finally have a reason that (fortunately or unfortunately) got me to jump back on.
I rescued a dragon earlier this year, maybe in October? I was at school when the dragon came home. I told my parents how to tell the difference and we were happy to learn that we acquired a girl (Ziggy)! I have another dragon, a boy named Munch, who's been around for 2 years now.
Mom sent me a picture and quite frankly, she looked quite weird. Then I got home for a weekend to see her and she was really thin, having a hard time functioning/moving around. She couldn't close her mouth entirely either.
When my family cleaned out the tank, they found about 50 meal worms in the critter country. She never ate crickets and never had veggies. She did have a bowl of water. This confirmed my suspicions of a calcium deficiency and the fact that she probably had been surviving on water.
Here's where I ask for help. She won't eat veggies, crickets, worms, anything on her own. I've been force feeding a chicken and veggie baby food mix, heavy on the protein and light on the veggies. I load it with calcium. She drinks water like a fiend. She's had the appropriate lighting (surprisingly) and I switched her over to tile a month ago. She actually has improved drastically and her color is coming back (she was super pale before). She's pooping much more regularly and they are looking a lot more normal. She's starting to move more/better and even starting to shed some parts of her skin. I honestly never thought she would make it this far. She's even starting to make gestures towards my other guy (separate tanks, no worries).
I'm worried she's never going to eat on her own. What do you do to start getting an animal back on that track?
Let me know about your experiences, ideas and thoughts! Thanks all!
Here's a picture for reference:
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a3...1122-00147.jpg
Re: Advice for a malnourished dragon
Tomato horned worms I've heard have more protein than crickets and seem to be a delicacy. I've never seen a beardie that would turn them down. Congratulations on nursing your bearding back to health. Hope this helps.
Re: Advice for a malnourished dragon
Alright! Randomly, Zig started eyeballing some supers that I was feeding to the other guy. I tossed one in, just to see what would happen, and for some reason she decided to eat!
She ate 3 supers and a cricket tonight. Crickets are harder for her to catch. I'm still doing the baby food mix, but now that she will eat supers, I'm covering them in calcium too.
Off tomorrow to buy a few tomato worms! This girl has made some progress, let me tell you!
I think she even ate a small piece (although a bit dried up) of romaine today. We are finally getting places! Woo hoo!
Re: Advice for a malnourished dragon
you might also want to give it repty boost its a combination of vitamins and insects its high in calcium and all the good stuff a canvor lizard needs you can all so give it a bath it will help the dry skin just fill a container with warm water like if u wear going to bathe a baby just enuf that the water will cover the spikes on the side of her belly it will do wonders trust me i bread bearded dragons and i also take in rescues so iv bin wear u r here is a good web sight u might want to try Bearded-Dragons.com Community its full of info hope your dragon gets better
Re: Advice for a malnourished dragon
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kitedemon
What a poor little dear! :tears: You might take a peek for black soldier fly larva (Phoenix worms) too they maybe hard to find or not depending... Good luck!!
ReptiWorms are also the same thing!