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What Do Jackson's Chameleons Eat?

By The Easy Chameleon Team | Updated 2025 | 7 min read

Jackson's chameleons (Trioceros jacksonii) are insectivores that eat a wide variety of live invertebrates in the wild. Their native habitat — the highland forests of East Africa and the introduced populations in Hawaii — provides a broad range of invertebrates year-round. In captivity, the goal is variety: rotating through multiple feeder species and gut-loading each one thoroughly.

One key distinction for Jackson's chameleons: they prefer cooler temperatures than veiled or panther chameleons. This affects feeding timing — always feed after basking, when the animal is properly warmed, but don't assume that a Jackson's that refuses food needs more heat. Sometimes the problem is the opposite.

Temperature Note: Jackson's chameleons have a basking temperature of only 78–85°F — significantly cooler than veiled (90–95°F) or panther (85–90°F) chameleons. A basking spot that's too hot will cause appetite suppression. If your Jackson's isn't eating, check temperatures with an infrared thermometer before assuming it's a diet issue.

Feeder Insects

Staple Feeders

FeederFrequencyNotes
CricketsPrimary — most feedingsMedium to large adults for adult Jackson's; small for juveniles
Dubia roaches3–4× per weekExcellent protein and calcium; readily accepted
Black soldier fly larvae (BSFL)2–3× per weekBest natural calcium ratio; no gut-loading needed
Silkworms1–2× per weekHighly digestible; excellent for juveniles and sick animals
Hornworms1–2× per weekHigh water content; great hydration feeder; smaller ones for juveniles

Occasional Treat Feeders

FeederFrequencyNotes
Waxworms1–2 per weekHigh fat; stimulate off-feed animals; avoid overuse
Butterworms1–2 per weekHigh calcium, high fat; treat only
Small superworms (adults only)1 per weekHigh fat; remove uneaten promptly — they can bite
Melanogaster fruit fliesDaily for hatchlingsEssential for very small juveniles; too small for adults

Do Not Feed

  • Fireflies / lightning bugs — toxic; fatal to reptiles
  • Wild-caught insects — pesticide and parasite risk
  • Ants — formic acid defense
  • Mealworms as a staple — poor Ca:P ratio and tough exoskeleton

Feeding Schedule

AgeFrequencyAmount per Session
Hatchling / neonate (0–2 months)DailyFruit flies and pinhead crickets; as many as accepted in 15 min
Juvenile (2–6 months)Daily8–12 small crickets
Sub-adult (6–12 months)Daily6–10 medium crickets
Adult (12+ months)Every other day5–8 adult crickets or equivalent

Time feedings to mid-morning — after basking lights have been on 1–2 hours and the chameleon is active. A Jackson's chameleon that hasn't warmed up properly will not hunt and may reject offered food.

Gut-Loading

The nutritional value of your feeder insects depends entirely on what those insects ate before being fed. Gut-load crickets and roaches for 24–48 hours before each feeding session.

  • Best gut-load foods: Collard greens, dandelion greens, mustard greens, sweet potato, butternut squash
  • Commercial options: Repashy Bug Burger, Mazuri Cricket Diet
  • Avoid: Iceberg lettuce (no nutrition), spinach (high oxalates), fruit (high sugar)

Full guide: gut-loading crickets and feeder insects.

Supplementation

SupplementJuvenileAdult
Calcium without D3 (plain)Every feedingEvery other feeding
Calcium with D32× per month2× per month
Reptile multivitamin2× per month2× per month
D3 Note for Hawaiian Jackson's: Jackson's chameleons sold in the US often originate from the established feral population in Hawaii. These animals may have different UVB exposure histories. When in doubt about D3 supplementation, consult a reptile veterinarian — too much D3 causes hypercalcemia, which is as dangerous as too little.

Full details and brand comparisons in our supplements guide.

Hydration

Jackson's chameleons are from highland forests where morning mist, dew, and cool rain are constant. They drink droplets from leaves and branches — not from standing water bowls. They typically need high daily water input.

  • Mist 2–3 times daily: morning (heavy), midday (light), afternoon (moderate)
  • Hornworms and silkworms are hydration feeders for animals that aren't drinking enough
  • Check urates: white = good hydration; yellow-orange = dehydrated
  • See our dehydration guide for treatment steps

Jackson's vs. Other Species Diet

FeatureJackson'sVeiledPanther
Plants eatenRarelyRegularlyRarely
Basking temp for digestion78–85°F90–95°F85–90°F
Feeder size (adult)Medium-largeLargeLarge
Feeding frequency (adult)Every other dayEvery other dayEvery other day
Sources & Further Reading