Furcifer lateralis
🔤 Taxonomy
Furcifer lateralis is the accepted scientific name for the Carpet chameleon covered here. Use this Latin name when comparing labels, origin documents, and close relatives, because trade names can overlap.
English common names used in the hobby:
- Carpet chameleon
German common names used in the hobby:
- Teppichchamäleon
📌 Description
Furcifer lateralis is a non-venomous lizard with care needs shaped by its natural habitat: sunlit shrubs, forest edges, gardens, grassland margins, and seasonally variable vegetation. Adults are usually around 17-25 cm total length, and a realistic captive lifespan is 3-5 years when housing, diet, and veterinary care are handled well.
Plan this species as a small display chameleon, not a handling pet. Its size makes dehydration, overheating, and female reproductive stress easy to miss, so the enclosure, measuring tools, drainage, and feeding routine should be ready before purchase. Animals bred in captivity from transparent sources are strongly preferable.
The useful care target is a planted enclosure with real choices: a warm basking route, cooler covered retreats, drinking droplets, dense foliage, and visual barriers.
🌍 Distribution
Furcifer lateralis is native to open, shrubby, and forest-edge habitats across much of Madagascar. In nature it is associated with sunlit shrubs, forest edges, gardens, grassland margins, and seasonally variable vegetation. This points to a bright, planted, well-ventilated setup with humidity peaks and drying periods rather than constantly wet air.
For captive care, the useful lessons are:
- dense foliage and thin-to-medium climbing routes
- a measured basking, cool, and night-temperature gradient
- humidity peaks with complete surface drying between wetter periods
- daily drinking droplets with drainage that keeps the floor clean
- solitary housing with visual barriers from other chameleons

⚖️ Legal status
As checked against current CITES Appendices and Species+ references in May 2026, Furcifer lateralis is listed in CITES Appendix II and is normally treated under EU wildlife-trade rules as Annex B unless a stricter national rule applies. It is not relevant to the Bern Convention because it is not native to Europe. Keep invoices, breeder records, import/export paperwork where relevant, and proof of legal origin. National rules on ownership, registration, sale, breeding, transport, and dangerous-animal lists may still apply.
🤌 Husbandry
Plan for at least 45 x 45 x 90 cm for one adult, with dense planting and excellent ventilation. Smaller juvenile setups can be useful for monitoring feeding and shedding, but they must still include a warm area, a cool area, water access, cover, and secure ventilation. Bare oversized enclosures often make new animals defensive or inactive; foliage and sight breaks make the space usable.
House carpet chameleons singly. Visual contact with other chameleons can suppress feeding and keep the animal in defensive coloration, so use opaque side panels, plant cover, or spacing between enclosures. Daily checks should include drinking opportunities, drainage, waste, locks, temperature, humidity, appetite, shed condition, and behaviour.
Use digital thermometers and hygrometers rather than guessing. Record feeding, weight, sheds, cleaning, and veterinary issues. A simple log makes seasonal changes, gradual weight gain, and early illness much easier to interpret.
💡 Lighting
Provide a clear day-night rhythm with bright visible light, appropriate UVB, and full darkness at night. Do not use visible night lights; they disturb rest and make it harder for the animal to use a normal cool night period.
Use a linear T5 lamp matched to the enclosure height, mesh, reflector, and the highest regularly used branch. Provide shade and plant cover so the chameleon can leave the UV zone. Replace lamps on schedule and measure UVI when possible; supplements do not replace correct light, heat, and diet.
🌡 Heating and temperature
Practical temperature targets: basking 28-31 °C, daytime ambient 22-26 °C, cool retreat 20-22 °C, night 16-20 °C. These values should create a gradient, not a single average. Measure basking surfaces with an infrared thermometer and ambient zones with digital probes.
Every heat source must be controlled by a thermostat or dimming controller where appropriate. Avoid heat rocks and unguarded bulbs. If the animal avoids the warm zone, gapes constantly, soaks all the time, refuses food, or stays hidden for days, verify the actual temperatures before changing diet or handling.
💧 Humidity and water
Target humidity and water management: 50-70% by day with higher night humidity and complete surface drying between mistings. Humidity should be paired with ventilation. Constantly wet, dirty air is not the same as healthy humidity, and chronic dryness is a common cause of dehydration and bad sheds.
Offer water in the form this species actually uses: misting, dripping, or rain-style droplets on leaves. Drainage and airflow matter as much as misting frequency, because wet floors and stagnant air quickly create hygiene and respiratory problems.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
The enclosure should be functional first and attractive second. Use stable fine branches, cork, live or safe artificial plants, rough shedding surfaces, and enough visual barriers that the chameleon can move without feeling exposed.
The floor can be simple if drainage and cleaning are reliable. Avoid dusty bedding, sharp decor, sticky tape inside the enclosure, unstable branches, and small loose items that could be swallowed. Doors, vents, cable ports, and lids must be escape-proof.
🪳 Feeding
Feed a varied, species-appropriate diet: small to medium gut-loaded insects such as crickets, roaches, flies, silkworms, and locusts. Young animals usually need smaller and more frequent meals; adults need body-condition-based feeding rather than food every time they appear interested. Overfeeding is as real a welfare problem as underfeeding.
Feeder insects should be gut-loaded and dusted according to the UVB plan and the animal’s age. Do not leave crickets or roaches in the enclosure overnight, and keep adult females lean enough to reduce reproductive strain.
🩺 Common problems
Common problems include dehydration, reproductive exhaustion in females, overheating, retained shed, poor UVB exposure, and stress from visual contact. Warning signs include weight loss, repeated refusal to eat, weak grip or poor movement, wheezing, bubbles at the nostrils, swollen eyes, repeated bad sheds, mouth injury, burns, diarrhoea, or unusual aggression from an otherwise settled animal.
When something looks wrong, first verify the basics with instruments: basking branch, cool retreat, night temperature, humidity, hydration, plant cover, diet, and recent stress. Serious weakness, injury, breathing signs, egg-binding concerns, neurological signs, or rapid decline need an experienced exotic-animal veterinarian.
📌 Conclusion
Furcifer lateralis suits keepers who can maintain a small, planted, well-measured display enclosure and watch body condition closely. Most failures come from dehydration, overheating, poor airflow, or overdriving females with food and heat.
📚 Sources and further reading
- CITES Appendices, checked 2026-05-04
- GBIF species backbone entry for Furcifer lateralis
- Species+ CITES and EU wildlife-trade references, checked May 2026
- EU invasive alien species policy pages, checked May 2026 where relevant
- ReptiFiles and specialist husbandry references where available
💬 Feedback
For questions, corrections, or practical notes, leave us a message in the forum thread.