Hi, I need your help.
Please PM me if you can offer first hand and practical advice, preferably from experienced long term keepers or anyone who has studied, or is studying, veterinary medicine or animal psychology.
My name is Lisa and I have been a reptile keeper for 10 years. I live in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney and have 2 bluetongues, 2 shinglebacks & 2 pythons.
They are all wonderful additions to our household.
I need help with one of my shinglebacks. Santos will be 5 in February and is a Tiliqua Rugosa Asper.
To cut a long story short, he is super active - practically hyperactive - but he just won't eat!
This is not a heat problem, a setup problem or a newbie problem.
We are entering our another summer and it looks like once again it's going to be a frustrating season of handing feeding, vitamin injections & supplements.
This is a hyperactive lizard that simply will not stop long enough for food. He has the attention span of a tissue.
You get one snail or one piece of meat into him by hand, maybe one more on a good day, and then his attention is diverted and off he goes again.
So every night or every second night I have to hold him down and either stick his nose into sloppy dog food and he licks away for about 20 seconds and then he's off, or I have to open his jaws enough to stick a piece of meat into his mouth and let the chewing reflex take over (although half the time he just spits them out) and then chase after him with more bits of meat. And then finally, as needs must, I give him a syringe of sandoz liquid calcium. No point leaving him a plate of food during the day, he just walks all through it.
We honestly believe he either has a psychological problem or the only other thing I can think of is that he is missing an enzyme or protein or even a gene that makes him hungry.
Sometimes we think he's hungry, he will seem interested if you stick your fingers in his face with or without food, but he'll have a lick and that's it.
We thought maybe he had become sexually mature and was looking for a mate, so we bought him a girlfriend. She might as well be invisible!
Has anyone ever experienced this? What can I do to make him interested in not only eating, but eating by himself again?
I have a great herp vet, Rob Johnson @ South Penrith Vet Clinic.
The thing is, he sees a generally healthy, active, robust lizard, when in fact it's a lizard that I have to spend half an hour every night trying desperately to get any kind of food I can think of into his mouth.
He thinks I am a worrier. I'm not. I have kept reptiles long enough to know my shingleback is not normal. He was yes, but now he's not.
I don't know why, I just want to fix the problem.
If anyone can help me, if anyone knows why an active (too active), alert, friendly lizard will not eat, please tell me. I am desperate. Are there medical tests that can be run?
We will go back to the vet soon, but I'm hoping I can go with a good news story. Otherwise Dr Johnson is going to keep my Santos till he finds out what's wrong with him!
This lizard is up and active climbing the walls at 5am (before his heat light comes on) and is still going strong at 10pm at night (hours after his heat light has gone off).
Every. Single. Day.
His timeline:
Feb 2006: Santos was born
July 2006: We got Santos. A super eater! He ran for food! Ate anything - fruit, veg, live food, dog food, egg etc. Ate anything.
Summer 06/07: No problems. Active and hungry.
Winter 2007: Brumation from March to July.
Summer 07/08: Bounced out of brumation super active but still a great eater. We bred snails for the first time and he completed the summer with an appetite strictly for snails and blueberries.
Hand fed mostly.
Winter 2008: Brumation from March to July
Summer 08/09: Bounced out of brumation super active, climbing walls, loungeroom, backyard all day. Also most nights. But won't eat! Try the old 'he won't starve himself, he'll eat when he's hungry'.
He began to develop hypocalcaemia. Received Vit B & Calcium injections, regular sandoz by syringe.
Began to practically forcefeed him - snails, bits of raw beef, chicken, sticking his head in dog food. Crap diet but it kept him at a healthy weight. Will not eat off a plate or off his own bat.
Winter 2009: Brumation March to July
Summer 09/10: Same as Summer of 08/09, however will now eat snails & blueberries sparingly but not enough to prevent onset of hypocalcaemia. Force feeding time again.
Autumn 2010: Thought he might be looking for a girlfriend so we got him a mailorder bride from SA, hoping this year he might get his leg over and become a lazy lizard.
Winter 2010: Brumation March to August
Present: It's beginning again. No interest in food, no interest in his lovely girlfriend. Only interested in being somewhere other than where he is at that point in time.
Please PM me if you can offer first hand and practical advice, preferably from experienced long term keepers or anyone who has studied, or is studying, veterinary medicine or animal psychology.
My name is Lisa and I have been a reptile keeper for 10 years. I live in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney and have 2 bluetongues, 2 shinglebacks & 2 pythons.
They are all wonderful additions to our household.
I need help with one of my shinglebacks. Santos will be 5 in February and is a Tiliqua Rugosa Asper.
To cut a long story short, he is super active - practically hyperactive - but he just won't eat!
This is not a heat problem, a setup problem or a newbie problem.
We are entering our another summer and it looks like once again it's going to be a frustrating season of handing feeding, vitamin injections & supplements.
This is a hyperactive lizard that simply will not stop long enough for food. He has the attention span of a tissue.
You get one snail or one piece of meat into him by hand, maybe one more on a good day, and then his attention is diverted and off he goes again.
So every night or every second night I have to hold him down and either stick his nose into sloppy dog food and he licks away for about 20 seconds and then he's off, or I have to open his jaws enough to stick a piece of meat into his mouth and let the chewing reflex take over (although half the time he just spits them out) and then chase after him with more bits of meat. And then finally, as needs must, I give him a syringe of sandoz liquid calcium. No point leaving him a plate of food during the day, he just walks all through it.
We honestly believe he either has a psychological problem or the only other thing I can think of is that he is missing an enzyme or protein or even a gene that makes him hungry.
Sometimes we think he's hungry, he will seem interested if you stick your fingers in his face with or without food, but he'll have a lick and that's it.
We thought maybe he had become sexually mature and was looking for a mate, so we bought him a girlfriend. She might as well be invisible!
Has anyone ever experienced this? What can I do to make him interested in not only eating, but eating by himself again?
I have a great herp vet, Rob Johnson @ South Penrith Vet Clinic.
The thing is, he sees a generally healthy, active, robust lizard, when in fact it's a lizard that I have to spend half an hour every night trying desperately to get any kind of food I can think of into his mouth.
He thinks I am a worrier. I'm not. I have kept reptiles long enough to know my shingleback is not normal. He was yes, but now he's not.
I don't know why, I just want to fix the problem.
If anyone can help me, if anyone knows why an active (too active), alert, friendly lizard will not eat, please tell me. I am desperate. Are there medical tests that can be run?
We will go back to the vet soon, but I'm hoping I can go with a good news story. Otherwise Dr Johnson is going to keep my Santos till he finds out what's wrong with him!
This lizard is up and active climbing the walls at 5am (before his heat light comes on) and is still going strong at 10pm at night (hours after his heat light has gone off).
Every. Single. Day.
His timeline:
Feb 2006: Santos was born
July 2006: We got Santos. A super eater! He ran for food! Ate anything - fruit, veg, live food, dog food, egg etc. Ate anything.
Summer 06/07: No problems. Active and hungry.
Winter 2007: Brumation from March to July.
Summer 07/08: Bounced out of brumation super active but still a great eater. We bred snails for the first time and he completed the summer with an appetite strictly for snails and blueberries.
Hand fed mostly.
Winter 2008: Brumation from March to July
Summer 08/09: Bounced out of brumation super active, climbing walls, loungeroom, backyard all day. Also most nights. But won't eat! Try the old 'he won't starve himself, he'll eat when he's hungry'.
He began to develop hypocalcaemia. Received Vit B & Calcium injections, regular sandoz by syringe.
Began to practically forcefeed him - snails, bits of raw beef, chicken, sticking his head in dog food. Crap diet but it kept him at a healthy weight. Will not eat off a plate or off his own bat.
Winter 2009: Brumation March to July
Summer 09/10: Same as Summer of 08/09, however will now eat snails & blueberries sparingly but not enough to prevent onset of hypocalcaemia. Force feeding time again.
Autumn 2010: Thought he might be looking for a girlfriend so we got him a mailorder bride from SA, hoping this year he might get his leg over and become a lazy lizard.
Winter 2010: Brumation March to August
Present: It's beginning again. No interest in food, no interest in his lovely girlfriend. Only interested in being somewhere other than where he is at that point in time.