Yet, my understanding is that CaCit is much more bioavailable than CaCO3.It's all the same element, the difference is there is much lower available calcium in calcium citrate then there is in calcium carbonate, which is why most reptile powders use carbonate.
You'd likely have to increase dusting frequency/amount if using a citrate product.
-Brandon
I'm not aware of any. However, it would need to be 2x more bioavailable than carbonate as Calcium carbonate has nearly 2x more elemental Calcium in it than Calcium citrate.I was asking if anyone knows of a published scientific article on this type of (CaCit+D3) product for reptiles.
There are some you can find online, many are going to be on reptiles in general, few on bearded dragons specifically. All the ones I've found throughout the years have been through various google searches on specific topics.After evaluating this information, I now post a more specific question:
What are the names of scientific journals which publish articles on reptile dietary research, and can those journals be searched on-line?
Thank you.
Friend MS UCDavis in animal behavior research just suggested the following query for my questions:There are some you can find online, many are going to be on reptiles in general, few on bearded dragons specifically. All the ones I've found throughout the years have been through various google searches on specific topics.
There really is no one stop shop for them like there is for human nutritional data.
-Brandon