We’ve spent the last 3 years researching the dietary needs of bearded dragons and evaluating their taste preferences and body condition. Finally, we are proud to announce our new Dragon Food!
Zoo Med’s new Dragon Food is a tailored diet for bearded dragons’ age-specific needs. Available in Juvenile and Adult formulas, the diets feature bearded dragon favorites like clover, dandelion greens, and Miscanthus grass to provide important long-stem fiber. Includes calcium-rich black soldier fly larvae, enticing mango fruit, and probiotics to maintain digestive health. This diet helps ensure all essential nutrients are offered to pets and fills in nutritional gaps that other food choices like live insects and produce often miss. This food is natural with added vitamins, minerals, and other trace nutrients. Made with NO WHEAT OR SOY, and no artificial colors, flavors, or preservatives.
When developing a diet, our first step is always to review the published scientific literature on the animal and related species. A few key points we considered when making this diet were:
- Bearded dragons are omnivores that change their diet as they age. Juveniles require a high-protein, insect-heavy diet, while adults require a high-fiber, plant-heavy diet.
- They eat a variety of plant materials in the wild, including naturalized dandelion and clover leaves, as well as hardy, fibrous stems of grass. (Wotherspoon et al., 2016)
- Obesity is common in adult pet bearded dragons and is often caused by a diet too high in fat and animal protein.
- Soft foods can cause dental disease because it sticks to teeth and harbors bacteria, while hard pellets may actually help scrape off plaque! (Mehler and Bennett, 2003)
Our goal was to ensure the diet was nutritious and delicious, so we conducted many preference trials of individual ingredients, ingredient combinations, and different pellet types. Our large group of bearded dragon volunteers all agreed on a crunchy diet and a few key ingredients: black soldier fly larva, mango, clover, and dandelion greens.
Once the final diets were complete, we monitored the bearded dragons long-term. Every day the dragons' stools were collected and examined. Each week, we weighed, measured, and closely inspected the dragons' body conditions to ensure juveniles were gaining weight appropriately and adults were maintaining healthy weights. We further tested the diet's ability to maintain healthy breeding animals and their offspring. All breeding females on this test diet laid several large clutches and hatched healthy babies. Those babies are now adults, and several are still in the test program, ready to be breeding adults themselves!