What Is Your Bearded Dragon Trying to Tell You? (2024)

Bearded Dragons

What your bearded dragon is trying to tell you

By

Adrienne Kruzer

What Is Your Bearded Dragon Trying to Tell You? (1)

Adrienne Kruzer

Adrienne Kruzer is a veterinary technician with more than 15 years of experience providing healthcare to domestic and exotic animals. She is trained as a Fear Free Certified Professional to prevent and alleviate fear, anxiety, and stress in pets.

Learn more about The Spruce Pets'Editorial Process

Updated on 03/22/22

Reviewed by

Natasha Diehl

What Is Your Bearded Dragon Trying to Tell You? (2)

Reviewed byNatasha Diehl

Dr. Diehl is a passionate veterinarian pursuing specialty medicine with over 6 years' experience with exotic pets. She now works with a team of other experienced vets to provide the best advice and care for their clients' pets.

Learn more about The Spruce Pets'Veterinary Review Board

Fact checked by

Emily Estep

What Is Your Bearded Dragon Trying to Tell You? (3)

Emily Estep is a biologist and fact checker focused on environmental sciences. She received a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism and a Master of Science in Plant Biology from Ohio University. Emily has been a proofreader and editor at a variety of online media outlets over the past decade and has reviewed more than 200 articles for The Spruce Pets for factual accuracy.

Learn more about The Spruce Pets'Editorial Process

What Is Your Bearded Dragon Trying to Tell You? (4)

Bearded dragons exhibit a variety of behaviors. Recognizing what behavior your beardie is exhibiting and why it is showing this kind of behavior is important to truly understand your pet. It is also helpful to know what behaviors are normal and which ones are signs of stress or illness.

The Wave

Arm waving is used by both sexes to show submission. Young bearded dragons may do a slow "wave" with one of their arms to signal, "I'm just a baby! Don't hurt me!" Your young beardie may even do this when it sees you walking up to it if it is intimidated by you, but they usually do this to older bearded dragons whom they don't know very well.

The Head Bob

When bearded dragons feel they have dominated something or someone they may bob their heads. This is literally what it sounds like. They bob their head as though they were saying "yes." More dominant beardies may do this in passing to younger beardies. Younger bearded dragons may do "the wave," while the older or more dominant dragon may concurrently "head bob."

The Beard Puff

Bearded dragons get their names from the area on their throat where a human might have a beard. This "beard" can be puffed out and darken to black on-demand when your beardie gets upset. It may also choose to puff and darken its beard if it feels threatened, if it isn't feeling well, or if it is trying to display dominance (often done during mating season to impress the ladies).

Color Changes

Overall body color changes and beard color changes may occur slowly as your bearded dragon grows, but if a sudden or temporary color change is noted, it could be due to stress, illness, or an emotion. Beardies will often darken or turn black if threatened or upset. If your bearded dragon's coloration of skin becomes lighter, it could be due to an impending shed.

They will also darken their beards while exhibiting the beard puff. Most bearded dragons will change colors and darken when brought to their exotics vet if they aren't used to traveling (keep your beardie warm on the way to the vet) or handling.

11 Types of Bearded Dragon Morphs

Glass Surfing

This is strange behavior that bearded dragons exhibit in times of boredom and stress. Beardies will run back and forth alongside their enclosure (often a glass tank) and stand on their hind legs trying to run up the side. It looks comical, and you may even think your beardie is playing or sees his reflection in the glass but it isn't doing this for fun.

If your beardie is glass surfing, it may need a larger enclosure or more playtime outside of its enclosure, or something else is stressing it, such as a pet cat staring at it or the loss of a cage mate. Glass surfing should be considered an abnormal behavior, and beardies can actually hurt themselves by rubbing their feet, bellies, and faces on the glass repeatedly.

Digging

Female bearded dragons may naturally burrow if they are trying to lay a clutch of eggs. In the wild, beardies cover their eggs to incubate them and keep them safe from predators. In captivity, they shouldn't have to worry about the predators, but most bearded dragon breeders will remove the eggs after they are laid and incubate them at controlled temperatures in incubators.

If your beardie is digging, be sure to provide the appropriate substrate so that it can lay its eggs, make sure you are offering enough calcium in its diet, and monitor its eating and activity levels carefully. Many bearded dragons become egg-bound and need assistance or surgery to remove all of the follicles or eggs from their bodies.

Brumation

Brumation is like hibernation for reptiles. Some reptiles in the wild will brumate when the weather gets cooler and food is more scarce. In captivity, temperatures are controlled and food is always available, so brumation is not necessary nor is it recommended. If your reptile isn't eating, moving much, burying itself, and defecating, he or she may be trying to brumate or could be sick. Make sure you contact your exotics vet to make sure your beardie isn't sick or dying.

Do not stop lighting, heating, or offering food to your bearded dragon in order to force a brumation. Continue to keep all of these resources available at their normal levels and quantities.

If you suspect your pet is sick, call your vet immediately. For health-related questions, always consult your veterinarian, as they have examined your pet, know the pet's health history, and can make the best recommendations for your pet.

What Is Your Bearded Dragon Trying to Tell You? (2024)
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