If it is a wire cage you won't be able too. If it is a glass cage you can try a waterfall, fogger, or Tropicaire humifier and air exchanger.
2006-10-24 13:03:04
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answer #1
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answered by Betty 4
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I had the same problem a while ago, the way I resolved it may not suit everyone but it might help. I put sphagnum moss in as a substrate and several branches in for climbing.
Then I added a large water bowl and many Blue-gum branches that were very leafy. Not all places have blue-gum so you will have to find something similar. Keep in mind iguanas love to nibble on leaves in their enclosures, I chose blue-gum for several reasons: 1) it absorbs moisture easily and thus helps increase humidity, 2) it's wonderful for climbing and makes the iguana feel safe as he can hide amongst the leaves and 3) it tastes horrible and isn't poisonous so the iguana won't eat it again after his first inevitable nibble. Try find a similar plant, check with reptile experts before using it though.
What I also use is a spray bottle filled with hot water, every morning I spray the cage so much the spray bottle is empty by the time I'm done. This should help, the branches aren't necessary but it does help.
2006-10-24 07:39:22
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answer #2
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answered by Munchies09 2
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As long as your are spraying him down once or twice a day, that should be all the humidity he needs. You might increase the spraying when he is shedding to make the process easier for him. Also how big is your tank? When an iguana is full grown, it needs an enclosure at least 8' tall, 8' long, and 4 feet wide. You can't buy these at the store so it has to be custom. They are very high maintenance but well worth it. Good luck.
Owner of a 4 year old, 6 foot long, male green iguana.
2006-10-24 12:00:55
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I am having a really difficult time understanding what exactly you are asking, but generally the ferret cages I have seen are too small for iguanas. An iguana enclosure should be at least twice the length of the iguana and should be tall. Six feet is the minimum habitat height recommended. Iguanas are tree climbing animals and feel most comfortable up high. The width of the cage should be at least half your iguana's length. The bigger the cage, the better off your iguana will be.
2016-05-22 03:02:21
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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We have a Rainbow Boa who needs a humidity level of about 80%. We got a fogger from bigappleherpetilogical.com for about $50. Works great! Just need to use distilled water in it. You can put it on a timer, so it will raise the humidity, then shut off for an hour or so, and come back on.
2006-10-23 15:02:41
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Place a wet sponge in a bowl inside his cage. Wet it as often as necessary. It works great for all my humidity needing herps. :)
2006-10-23 21:45:47
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answer #6
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answered by little_star_polaris 1
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If u have a screen top, put something on it 2 cover it. If not, use LOTS of moss and spray OFTEN!
2006-10-23 14:48:00
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answer #7
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answered by Alicia R 2
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