Myth 99: “A great Option How to Obtain Chameleons Is to Buy Eggs Online”

27/12/2025

This myth fuels one of the darkest frauds in exotic reptile husbandry. The online sale of chameleon eggs is not just misguided—it's a calculated deception that endangers animals, exploits buyers, and undermines ethical standards in herpetoculture.

Why This Practice Is Dangerous and Fraudulent

Claim by Sellers vs Reality

C: Eggs come from "beautiful males"
R: Photos are often stolen, color-enhanced, or entirely fabricated

C: Hatching is "easy"
R: Neonate care is the most fragile phase in chameleon ontogeny—most die within weeks 

C: Sex and origin are "guaranteed"
R: Sexing embryos is impossible; origin claims are unverifiable and often fake

C: ”After-sales support"
R: Sellers vanish post-sale; desperate buyers flood forums for help

C: "Success stories"
R: Testimonials are often fabricated, vague, and unverifiable 

Core Problems

• Fake Origins: Sellers misuse photos from reputable breeders or the internet, often boosting colors to misrepresent lineage.

• Hatching Complexity: Raising hatchlings demands precise temperature, humidity, and micro-prey management. Most amateurs fail, and mortality is high.

• Transport Ethics: Eggs suffer lethal damage from shaking, temperature swings, and poor packaging.

• No Accountability: Promised replacements or refunds rarely materialize. Sellers disappear, leaving buyers stranded.

• Overpricing & Bundling: Eggs are sold at inflated prices or in manipulative bundles ("buy 3, get 1 free"), baiting novices into risky purchases.

• Constructed Success: Fake reviews and cb testimonials are posted to simulate legitimacy, but they collapse under scrutiny.

The Origin of the Scam

This fraudulent model, reportedly initiated by an individual named "Eric," has metastasized into a global scam. It thrives on platforms with minimal oversight, exploiting the emotional appeal of "raising your own chameleon from an egg."

What You Should Do Instead

• Buy from reputable breeders who offer juveniles at least 3 months old, with verified origin and lineage.

• Avoid eggs entirely—they are not suitable for beginners or ethical husbandry.

• Support ethical practices that prioritize animal welfare, transparency, and community integrity.

• Save yourself from heartbreak: juvenile chameleons are more resilient, easier to feed, and safer to raise.

Why This Matters

Buying eggs supports a system of animal suffering, consumer betrayal, and industry degradation. Every egg sold is a gamble with life—often ending in death, debt, and disillusionment.

Legacy-grade husbandry begins with truth, not temptation. Reject the egg myth. Choose life, ethics, and credibility.

Author: Petr Nečas
My projects:   ARCHAIUS   │   CHAMELEONS.INFO