Hello,
You may remeber me from last week when I posted about my new Bearded Dragon, Sasha. Everything was find until Tuesday (April 14) The other days I gave her 5 small worms a day. She pooped normally and was active so I didn't change anything. On Tuesday however, she only ate one worm and refused anything else I tried to give her. I didn't think much of it at the time. I just assumed she just wasn't that hungry at the time. Now it's Friday the 17th and she still wont eat. She's still pooping so she's not impacted or anything. She's refused various different things. Lettuce, Grapes, Worms, Crickets, and beardie food from Petco. Now she won't move from her basking spot and just sits there with her eyes closed. She's breathing and looks at me for a couple seconds then closes them back up. She has proper temperatures, her UVB bulb is fine, her food was dusted with calcium once a day and she had normal human interaction. I really don't want her to starve to death and I can't keep wasting money just to have her refuse it. I don't know what to do anymore and money is tight so I don't know if I can take her to the vet.
Please help me. I don't want her to die.
-Justin
EDIT:
She has a 30 gallon tank
She is a juvenile at 8 inches long.
She has 100W ZooMed basking light.
She has a 13W compact 10.0 UVB light.
She has ReptiSand substrate
Her basking area varies between 95 and 102 degress F and the cool side is between 80 and 85 degrees F
She still has stress marks on her belly.
It's a good sign that she's pooping regularly. That tells me that she's probably not impacted. What kind of worms has she been eating? The lack of appetite could be a few things. If you're seeing any light/gray patches of skin, she could be getting ready for a shed which is known to put them off of food for a while and can cause moodiness. The fact that she's closing her eyes often in the basking spot could indicate that the coil UVB light is bothering her because they have a narrow and very intense output which can cause issues with eyesight and proper exposure levels. I would turn the UVB light off for now and try to provide some natural sunlight outside if the weather permits. If that perks her up, then I'd replace the UVB light with a tube style in a reflective fixture which will give a much more even and widespread distribution of UVB in the enclosure.