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When a lizard has trouble to shed its skin
05-11-2012, 08:57 AM,
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Ram Offline
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When a lizard has trouble to shed its skin
Since I have heard it can be bad for the lizard if the skin is not shed completely. As the owner, what can you do to help a lizard if there is a problem to shed the skin?
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05-12-2012, 05:44 PM,
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Fishbone Offline
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RE: When a lizard has trouble to shed its skin
Well, the first thing to do is to set the animal up so it doesn't have this problem. There are many tricks that people have developed over the years, moist hides for leos, regular baths for beardies, having large water dishes for most monitors to soak in. Learn how to keep the animal properly, and you will rarely have to do this.

What to actually do will vary from species to species, and situation to situation. Typically you will want to soak the animal in lukewarm water. if it is skin on the body, you can peel it gently, but never peel anything that won't give naturally as you can injure the animal. You can also rub it off gently with a damp cloth. Much of this goes for snakes as well. The real problems are normally on the toes, tail tip, and eyes. That is where lizards have an extra problem. If the skin from the toes is not shed, it will build up, cutting of circulation and the affected toes will end up necrotizing and eventually falling off. The good news is that most lizard species seem to have evolved to recover from this very quickly. With retained shed on the toes, you want to soak the lizard to soften the skin. You may have to do this multiple times, depending on how long the shed has been there, and if it is multiple layers. After it is softened, you basically have to get it off, which can be a tricky proposition considering how small and fragile most lizards toes are. I have a Golden Tegu, Tupinambis teguixin, that I took in as a rescue, with multiple retained sheds on her feet. I soaked her a few times a day, and eventually clipped the skin off with a sharp pair of sewing scissors. She had already lost a few toes by this point. She was kept in a dry cage with a small water bowl. I have now had her for almost 6 months, with a large water pan she can soak in, and swim a bit, and haven't had to do a thing to help her shed.

The point being, these problems are all caused by improper husbandry. So the single most important thing you can do is to learn the best ways to keep your animal, then do these things, watch the animal for problems, then act and adjust accordingly.
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05-12-2012, 06:40 PM,
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Ram Offline
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RE: When a lizard has trouble to shed its skin
Thanks for the information. Thumbsup

If I am correct, it sounds like by having a small water pool in their habitat it helps them to soften the skin for shedding?

I would be scared to use a pair of scissors to help the lizard to take of the skin on a puny toe. It does sound tricky if the lizard can't stay still.

Do you have trouble to soak the lizards or snakes in warm water for the purpose of helping them soften the hard to shed skin? Do they even like warm water? What water temperature should it be?
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05-13-2012, 08:11 AM, (This post was last modified: 05-13-2012, 08:11 AM by Fishbone.)
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RE: When a lizard has trouble to shed its skin
Well it's highly variable. There is no rule for lizards in general. It is very good for a golden tegu to have pool to bath in. It will greatly increase the chances of a bearded dragon getting a respiratory infection to have a pool to bath in. You have to look at each individual species on it's own.

Most lizards don't mind a bath, but it depends on the species and the individual animal, and how much it trusts you. I tell people to aim for baby bath warm, say 88 - 90 F. But again it varies a bit. I will go on the warmer side with an animal if I am trying to encourage defecation, on the cooler side if it is for hydration or shedding issues. And as they are ectothermic, you don't want to "shock" the animal, if you take a lizard that has just woken up and the lights just came on, and he is 76 F, you don''t want to put him into a 92 F tub of water.

And yes it is tricky yo do things like that to a lizards toes. You need help to hold the animal still. Similar to removing a retained eye cap. It's a procedure that requires some patience and a steady hand. I actually clipped the top of the dead skin, kept soaking her a few times a day, then peeled it off with a pair of tweezers. Poor thing ended up loosing a few toes before I got her all fixed up, and has one toe that looks a bit deformed. But she is good and happy now. I'm getting ready to bump her up to a 75 gallon tank, with a bigger pool.
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