I was talking to my friend some months ago about weird bearded dragon facts and good foods to give them...Such as bearded dragons possession venom glands that are useless.(cause I'm sad and love learning this stuff)
any way He mentioned that slugs or de-shelled snails are a good possible food source for bearded dragons as they are high in protein and low in fat (dragons not so good with fat).
Just wondering what your guys views are to this?
obv I wouldn't just pick them outta the garden as they are full or parasites and good knows what else.
I guess it could be fed, it maybe hard for a dragon to actually get the slug in it's mouth due to the mucus and some of the slugs anti predator defenses. I wouldn't ever feed anything from outside, you might have to find a breeder. I am unsure of any. The mucus of the slug has a horrible taste that may not be pleasant to bearded dragons.
There are natural predators of slugs and lizards are not one of them.
Frogs, toads, snakes, hedgehogs, Salamanders, eastern box turtles, rats, Caecilians and also some birds and beetles are slug predators.
Also found out that my ferret may eat these too, lol gross. i wouldn't feed them to him though, so he will never know. :wink:
I wouldn't feed slugs, their slime can coat the inside of the mouth and just about choke them. The blue tongue skink forum I used to visit had bad stories about slugs. Stick to crunchy bugs for dragons.
as im sure other people have said, Slugs may suffocate your beardie from all of its mucus. Unless you can find a breeder that uses slugs or knows of using slugs as a feeder, i wouldn't do it
I wouldn't feed slugs, their slime can coat the inside of the mouth and just about choke them. The blue tongue skink forum I used to visit had bad stories about slugs. Stick to crunchy bugs for dragons.
A few years back, one of my females licked a slug once and the side of her mouth turned bright orangish-red. You could tell that she hated the taste of it and had trouble getting the slime off her tongue. I was able to wash most of it off and she never licked another one. So, I would say that it is certainly not a good feeder.
A few years back, one of my females licked a slug once and the side of her mouth turned bright orangish-red. You could tell that she hated the taste of it and had trouble getting the slime off her tongue. I was able to wash most of it off and she never licked another one. So, I would say that it is certainly not a good feeder.
Well, after watching Sabrina's reaction after just licking it, I would certainly not recommend feeding them. Her tongue was going crazy trying to get the slime off and she kept swallowing hard like she felt nauseous. I can't imagine how she would have reacted (and don't want to) if she had eaten one.
Well, after watching Sabrina's reaction after just licking it, I would certainly not recommend feeding them. Her tongue was going crazy trying to get the slime off and she kept swallowing hard like she felt nauseous. I can't imagine how she would have reacted (and don't want to) if she had eaten one.
Well, after watching Sabrina's reaction after just licking it, I would certainly not recommend feeding them. Her tongue was going crazy trying to get the slime off and she kept swallowing hard like she felt nauseous. I can't imagine how she would have reacted (and don't want to) if she had eaten one.
I can just imagine the look she was giving you, like, "You didn't stop me from doing that Mom! How rude of you! You're supposed to know what I'm going to do and stop me before I do it!" lol Silly girl.