I've cared for panoptes that have had their wounds become fly blown and survived, just the flesh has to be dead not the whole animal.
So they were under the ear membrane? Like i said, i'm no guru on agamid anatomy but i can't get my head around evolution allowing an ear that lets maggots into it evolve.
Turns out they do have eustachian tubes.
[FONT=Arial, Verdana, sans-serif]Anatomy
In reptiles with external ear structures, the tympanic membrane is visible, either nearly contiguous to the surface of the skin (as with iguanids such as the green iguana), or recessed deeper into the head (as with some scincids, such as the blue-tongue skink, and agamids, such as the bearded dragon). The tympanic membrane covers the middle ear cavity. In fact, it is the outer boundary of this cavity which is linked, on its other side to the pharynx and eustachian tube. In general, the inner boundary of the middle ear cavity has two openings. There is a round one, covered by a thin membrane, and, farther back towards the neck, an oval opening which is uncovered. The stapes crosses the middle ear cavity, from the inside of the tympanic membrane, its inner end fitted inside the oval opening. The outer end of the stapes has a cartilage cap which comes into contact with the tympanic membrane. In some reptiles, this cartilage, called the extrastapes, is attached to the quadrate, the primary support of the lower jaw.[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Verdana, sans-serif]Beyond the round and oval openings of the middle ear cavity is the inner ear cavity. Here are located the organs related to balance (the semicircular canals, utricle, and saccule) and hearing (cochlear duct). The cochlear duct and the saccule are both suspended in perilymphatic fluid; the cochlear is also filled with this fluid. The inside of the duct has two specialized regions, the papilla basilaris and the smaller macula lagenae. Both of these areas are actually clusters of sensory cells. These areas also have cilia which are embedded in a membrane within the cochlear duct. These sensory cells give rise to the auditory nerve (the VIIIth cranial nerve).[/FONT]
Yeah they could easily have come from a woodie. He eats those daily but the last ones were yesterday and i only noticed them today. Not that i looked yesterday I must admit.
I am not on drugs for the record. The things I saw were about 4mm long by 1.5mm wide and cream coloured, and the 4 or so that I saw appeared to be wiggling inside his head a bit like worms wiggle..
They are not there at the moment and i really really hope they have not gone further dorn into his ear canal.. but maggots ONLY eat dead flesh! If they are maggots i don't see how they will survive very long as my beardie is very, very much alive.
Veins. I like that theory!!! That is very non-life threatening! Kudos to that excellent theory!!!