Panther Chameleon
Furcifer pardalis
Panther chameleons are arboreal lizards from Madagascar, famous in the reptile community for the intense regional color differences shown by adult males. Furcifer pardalis males may display red, blue, green, orange, or barred patterns associated with localities such as Ambilobe, Nosy Be, or Sambava, while females are generally smaller and more muted. They use independently moving eyes, a projectile tongue, gripping feet, and a prehensile tail to hunt insects among shrubs and trees.
Captive care works best when keepers treat panther chameleons as visual, solitary reptiles with high environmental needs. Screen or well-ventilated enclosures, ultraviolet light, hydration through misting or drippers, live plants, and stable temperature gradients matter more than frequent handling. Breeders often maintain locality labels and pairing records because color expectations and conservation concerns can be blurred by casual mixing. Buyers should look for captive-bred animals that are feeding well, hydrated, and free of mouth, eye, or shedding problems.
Colors: Ambanja, Ambilobe, Ankify, Blue Bar, Nosy Be, Orange Bar, Red Bar, Sambava, Tamatave, Yellow Bar