Argus Monitor Care Sweep

WELCOME TO THE ARGUS WORLD!

(Can be considered professional experience needed, or just mediocre with a lot of research.)

On this page, we will go over the care of your monitor!  I have owned reptiles since I was six years old and have had a deep fascination with reptiles.  I have had years of researching, reptile-common-sense, and experience debugging the false care info and putting together a care sheet to meet your reptile’s needs and enrich their lives.

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Additional Info:

Varanus panoptes

They also go by the name Yellow Spotted Monitor.  They get around 4.5ft to almost 5ft!  In captivity they can live up to an average of 15-20 years old.  This monitor loves terrestrial space to run around and burrow.  Argus monitors are tameable but will take patience.  They are not as shy as mangrove monitors, so you will get some reward for taming this species.  Never forcefully handle any monitor; don’t approach with your hand fast and above them.  There are a lot of different ways to tame your monitor, and one way doesn’t fit all.  Taming is more accessible when the enclosure is perfect for their needs and eating well.  When you first get your monitor, assuming it’s a baby, It is a safety caution to leave them alone for 7-14 days besides cleaning their water and enclosure.  After this waiting period, they should have settled in enough to accept food.  Offer via tongs first, but leave a dish out of food if they do not take it.  Tong feeding is a prevalent way to tame your monitor, so if they accept that way of eating, you are getting a great start.

Enclosure:

Babies can live comfortably in a 36x24x23 in. enclosure, with added climbing decor, but you can go more significantly as long as you add hides.  Monitors grow fast and would need a quick upgrade.  The economic idea is to upgrade yearlings to adult enclosures that are  4ftLx2ftWx2ft tall minimum.  Add a lot of substrate in any of their enclosures to allow them to burrow.  That enclosure would be their final cage upgrade, but if you want to go bigger, you can.  Just add a lot of clutter accordingly.  You want them to be able to hide, to feel more secure.

Substrate(Flooring):

These monitors are at optimal health and happiness if they can burrow in their enclosures.  It is of utmost importance that you allow a large enough layer of substrate for this species to burrow.  Cypress mulch, play sand, and organic topsoil mixes would do great.  You can also substitute the cypress mulch with coco fiber.  Repti Bark tends to dye the water, so we avoid it.

Décor:

  These monitors can climb, swim, and dig.  Giving your monitor all those options in their enclosure setups is essential.  You can add climbing décor by screwing in logs to the sides of the enclosure.  You also must add a tile on an elevated space for basking.   Include a giant water bowl(they must be able to swim) on the cold side (reduces bacteria), and you can put a hide on the hot and cold side.  Add a bunch of clutter.  Refrain from cardboard; it molds super fast!  Add décor that allows them to climb; from adults to babies, they love to climb.  The tallest part of your cage should be a basking spot.  Younger monitors are more agile, but as they get bigger, they lessen the more challenging climbing décor because they can fall.  

Cohabbing long-term isn’t a good idea.  You can put them in for breeding SUPERVISED.  If you have no experience and haven’t researched this topic heavily, do not put them together.  Pet stores can quickly put baby Argus Monitors together because there isn’t competition or breeding at their early stages of life.

Humidity & Temps:

60-80%  Humidity.  75-80° Cool side, 93-98°Warm side 110-115° Basking spot (Basking).  Always have a basking light on a thermostat for accurate temp control.  Heating pads are never sufficient for lizard heating.  You should ensure they have a dry area in their enclosure to prevent a foot infection when they cannot dry their feet out.

Handling:

They can be flighty in the beginning.  Always approach a monitor slowly and low with your hand when you want to interact with them.  Do not force a handling session with your monitor.  It does not speed up the taming process.  Let your monitor choose when they want to walk on you.  Let them walk on your hand.  If you grab them, it will terrify them and make the taming process last longer than necessary.  The first step to taming your monitor is tong-feeding your monitor.  If you can get your monitor relaxed enough in your presence to tong-feed, with some days or weeks of feeding like this, the monitor will eventually be curious enough to climb onto you.  You can make them more comfortable by hanging around their cage doing your usual home tasks and slowly putting your hand out without forcing it on them.  Stop pushing yourself on the monitor after their first tail whip or bite.  I have made progress by slowly putting my hand out to them even while they are in a defensive position (puff out, tailback).  Suppose they walk away, retreat.  It is all about patience and dedication, but it is gratifying once you get them to trust you.

Feeding:

 Feed babies small meals daily, juveniles get food every other day, and adults once a week to twice a week.  I usually do it every three days.  Feeding them once a month, in any case, is abuse.  There are no slow-growing monitors by feeding them once a month.  That is an excuse for a pet owner’s inability to provide the monitor they thought they could; onto the topic of what to feed your monitor through the stages of their lives.  Babies will feed on insects like well-fed crickets, waxworms, mealworms, earthworms, super worms, silkworms, grasshoppers, roaches, and canned insects.  If you have a picky eater that won’t accept their bugs, bringing them straight to meat and eggs is no adverse effect.  VARIETY IS KEY!  Juveniles can move to a more meaty diet, same as adults.  They can eat Meat: WHOLE PREY fish, shrimp, chicks/chickens, quail, and dusted with calcium: ground Turkey, Boiled egg, and chicken parts.  Avoid feeding them liver parts, ground beef, mice/rats, and steak since they are either high fat or aren’t good for the reptile.  WHOLE PREY IS KEY WHOLE PREY IS IMPORTANT.  Those cheap chicken legs are convenient but shouldn’t be fed as much as you offer them other meats of entire prey.  Fish is an essential key in their diet because of their natural habitat.

Vitamins:

A light dusting of calcium if it is not a total prey item.

Cleaning:

WATER IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT TO KEEP CLEANPlease clean your monitor’s poops & pees once you see them; they can get sick if you don’t!  Every six months, deep clean of enclosure & replace the substrate.  F10 vet cleanser is an excellent method in getting the worse stains out and cleans glass just as well.

Taming:

To elaborate on taming your monitor, taking their hides out does not always work.  So it would be a good start to give them somewhere to hide during this tame process; even giving them the proper big enclosure could aid in taming your monitors.  Every monitor is different; there is no exact science, so starting with the most basic rule is safe.  Please give them the correct enclosure without anything missing.  Try taming your monitor with the standard tong-feeding method.   If they do not take tong feeding, let them fatten up a little by giving them private feedings until they get adjusted to the feeding schedule.  Then slowly start introducing yourself to the feeding by sitting there.  If that works, you can bring out the tongs and offer food like that.  It’s a timely process, especially with most imports.  Some come out the egg ready to eat off the tong, though!  I have had those myself.

ALL FEEDERS:

List of all the insects

Duba, Hisser, DuskyCave, Lobster, Headlamp, Ivoryhead, Peruvian Cave, RedHead, RedGoblin, and Red Runner ROACHES

Florida OWNERS: Discoid, Australian, Green Banana, Suriname, Horseshoe crab, Oriental, Palid, Death Head, Florida Skunk ROACHES

Locust, Crickets, Grasshoppers, Silkworms, Superworms, Mantis, Earthworm, European/African/Canadian Nightcrawlers, Alabama Jumper, Black Soldier Fly Larva/BSFL/Phoenix Worms/Calci Worm, Butter Worms, Wax Worms, Hornworms, Shrimp, Crabs, Crayfish, Mussels, Snails, Giant African land snails, Helix Aspersa, Helix Vermiculata, Otala Lactea, Theba Pisana LAND SNAILS, Apple/Mystery Snails, Nerites, Ramshorns, Trumpets, Japanese Trapdoor AQUATIC SNAILS.

List of whole prey

salt water and fresh water fish, rabbit (rarely), chicken, quail, piglets, shrimp, crab, rats/mice (rat and mice not recommended to feed a lot because of their fat content), frogs(not poisonous), birds, and snakes.

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