What Do Panther Chameleons Eat?
Panther chameleons (Furcifer pardalis) are pure insectivores. Unlike veiled chameleons, which occasionally graze on plant matter, panther chameleons eat almost exclusively insects. Their diet in the wild consists of a wide variety of invertebrates — flies, grasshoppers, beetles, caterpillars, and whatever else presents itself in the rainforest canopy of Madagascar.
In captivity, replicating that variety is the goal. No single feeder insect provides complete nutrition. The combination of a diverse feeder rotation, proper gut-loading, and consistent supplementation is what keeps a panther chameleon healthy for its full 5–7 year lifespan. For the full care picture, see our panther chameleon care guide.
Best Feeder Insects
Staple Feeders
| Feeder | Use Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Crickets | Primary staple — daily or most feedings | Widely available; excellent gut-load vehicle; must be gut-loaded well |
| Dubia roaches | 3–5× per week | Higher protein and calcium than crickets; long gut-retention time; no odor |
| Black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) | 2–3× per week | Best natural Ca:P ratio of any feeder; no gut-loading required |
| Silkworms | 1–2× per week | Soft-bodied, high protein, high moisture; excellent digestibility |
| Hornworms | 1–2× per week | Excellent hydration feeder; high water content; readily accepted |
Treat Feeders (Use Sparingly)
| Feeder | Max Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Waxworms | 1–2 per week | High fat; use only for off-feed animals or weight gain |
| Superworms (adult males only) | 1–2 per week | High fat, moderate protein; can bite chameleon — remove uneaten within an hour |
| Butterworms | 1–2 per week | High calcium naturally; high fat; treat only |
| Waxmoths (if you breed waxworms) | Occasionally | Adult waxmoths are excellent high-protein feeder; chameleons love them |
Avoid These Feeders
- Wild-caught insects — risk of pesticides and parasites
- Fireflies and lightning bugs — toxic bufadienolides; fatal to reptiles
- Ants — formic acid defense mechanisms
- Mealworms as a staple — poor Ca:P ratio; tough exoskeleton; use rarely if at all
Feeding Schedule
| Age | Frequency | Amount per Session | Time of Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hatchling (0–3 months) | Daily | 10–15 small (¼ in) crickets or fruit flies | Mid-morning |
| Juvenile (3–6 months) | Daily | 10–15 small-medium crickets | Mid-morning |
| Sub-adult (6–12 months) | Daily | 8–12 medium crickets | Mid-morning |
| Adult (12+ months) | Every other day | 5–10 adult crickets or equivalent | Mid-morning |
Always feed in the morning after the basking light has been on for 1–2 hours. A warmed chameleon digests efficiently; a cold chameleon cannot properly digest food, which causes impaction and gout.
Gut-Loading
Gut-loading feeder insects 24–48 hours before feeding is non-negotiable. The nutritional quality of the insect is the nutritional quality your chameleon receives. See our detailed gut-loading guide for the full food list and technique.
Quick Gut-Load Reference
| Food | Value |
|---|---|
| Collard greens, dandelion greens, mustard greens | High calcium — primary gut-load foods |
| Sweet potato, butternut squash | Beta-carotene (provitamin A) |
| Repashy Bug Burger or Mazuri Cricket Diet | Commercial gut-load; convenient and effective |
| Iceberg lettuce, fruit | Avoid — low nutrition, high water/sugar |
Supplementation
Dusting feeders with calcium and vitamins fills the nutritional gaps that even excellent gut-loading can't fully close. The schedule below is the consensus recommendation for panther chameleons.
| Supplement | Juvenile (under 12 months) | Adult (12+ months) |
|---|---|---|
| Calcium without D3 | Every feeding | Every other feeding |
| Calcium with D3 | Twice per month | Twice per month |
| Reptile multivitamin | Twice per month | Twice per month |
Dust lightly — a thin white coating on the insect is correct. Heavy dusting causes vitamin toxicity over time. Full supplement detail in our supplements guide.
Hydration and Diet
Panther chameleons require higher water intake than veiled chameleons. Their rainforest origin means they're adapted to daily rain events. Signs of proper hydration: white or pale-yellow urates (the white part of the droppings), plump body condition, clear eyes.
- Mist enclosure 2–3× daily; panther chameleons drink during and after misting sessions
- Offer hornworms and silkworms as hydration feeders during dry conditions or off-feed periods
- Yellow-orange urates signal dehydration — increase misting immediately
- See our dehydration guide for treatment steps
When a Panther Chameleon Won't Eat
Short-term appetite fluctuation is normal. If your panther refuses food for more than 1 week, work through this checklist:
- Temperatures — basking spot should be 85–90°F surface. Cold chameleons don't eat.
- Feeder boredom — if only crickets for weeks, try a dubia roach or hornworm
- Shedding — food refusal 1–2 days before and during a shed is normal
- Stress — excessive handling or visible animals cause appetite suppression
- Illness — if no other cause after 2 weeks, consult a reptile vet
Full troubleshooting in our chameleon won't eat guide.
Panther vs. Veiled Diet Comparison
| Feature | Panther Chameleon | Veiled Chameleon |
|---|---|---|
| Plant matter | Rarely/never | Regular grazing |
| Feeder variety | Wide; prefers active insects | Wide; accepts more variety |
| Adult feeding frequency | Every other day | Every other day (females less) |
| Overfeeding risk | Obesity, gout | Obesity, excessive egg production (females) |
- Chameleon Forums — Community knowledge maintained by experienced keepers worldwide
- Association of Reptilian and Amphibian Veterinarians (ARAV) — Veterinary care standards for reptiles
- IUCN Red List — Species range, ecology, and conservation data
- Melissa Kaplan's Herp Care Collection — Foundational reptile husbandry guides
