A 40 gallon terarium is fine for 1 adult dragon. Get one with a sliding cover or the lizard will push the lid off. U need calci-sand for substrate, a hiding spot, something to bask on, a heat rock(not a heat pad), and some lighting. I have 2 basking lights for my dragon , one with 3% UV and one white light. I also have a long 7% UV light. That pretty much covers it, except for a water bowl and a spray bottle. Some dragons will not drink water from a bowl and need to be sprayed daily. I use a 10% UV which is better recommended, dragons are desert animals and require the UV light for calcium.
bearded dragons grow as they get older.......kind of like every thing else
There are lizards, crocidiles, snakes, bearded dragon, water dragon, and alot other reptiles.
Well, they kind of creep with their stomachs touching the ground.
yes because my bearded dragon is Sandfire and another one that has a darker brown I dont know what kind she is
The term "Dragon" is largely used for any reptile of the Agamid family, including but not limited to water dragons, sailfin dragons, moutain horned dragons, etc. If this family of reptiles is what you mean by "dragon," then yes, Bearded Dragons are also Agamids. If you are referring to the kind that flies and breaths fire, then no.
most likely to be a bearded dragon
I'm pretty sure that he would enjoy the attention, but you need to be careful to be gentle and kind. So yeah.
They have small hairs on their chin (flot). Even though people say dragons are mystical, the Bible talks a lot about mystical creatures in revelation. Just thought I should say that>>>
A bearded dragon can eat caterpillars, but you never want to feed your pet of any kind something wild, that you caught.
An insectivore. That means it eats insects such as locusts, crickets, mealworms, waxworms and the odd pinky mouse or day old chick.
Yes, all depending on what kind of morph you have, some beardies might appear more yellow and some orange
The average adult bearded dragon gets 18 inches long (1 1/2 feet) . There are different species of bearded dragon that can get up to 24 inches (2 feet). I have 5 adult dragons. The smallest is about 14 inches, the largest is about 22 inches. Ones that have some "German Giant" genes tend to get larger but you really can't tell until they are full grown. 18 inches is a good estimate but it could be 4 - 6 inches difference in either direction.