O b l i v i o n . wrote: Hello guys. (:
I am looking into buying a Bearded Dragon. [and definitely getting one]
This will be my first ever reptile, so basically I'm a new reptile mommy! (:
I'm definitely nervous I won't get the lighting right.
ReptiSun UVB 10.0, largest that will fit the cage and a basking light, correct?
Is it really necessary to mount the light on the inside of the top? I will if needed.
and, would it be okay to use Zilla Green Terrarium Liner?
It kinda looks like carpet to me, but I'm just paranoid.
Thank you. (:
It's great that you are asking questions and gathering information! Too many people just jump into buying reptiles without realizing how difficult their care actually is.
This is a great website for understanding UV.
http://www.uvguide.co.uk/aboutus.htm If you go the route of separate light sources for UVA and UVB, then ReptiSun 10.0 is the best you can get for UVB. They can be expensive in stores, if you can even find them. I order mine online every 6 months from
http://www.bigappleherp.com/. $25 each, beats my local Petco's price of $50 each. I use ZooMed's(makers of ReptiSun) basking bulbs. The brand of basking bulb you get does not matter as much, as long as it is producing the correct heat. Be sure you are measuring this with at least a digital probe thermometer. Dials and stick on are not accurate. Unless your tank is isn't deep, then I don't recommend mounting it inside the tank for safety reasons. Placing the UVB fluorescent over wire does reduce almost 1/4 of the UVB the lamp puts out, but you can significantly fix this with reflectors. Even without reflectors, I've rarely seen a dragon have trouble getting enough UVB by having the light above wire. Your dragon should be able to get within 8 inches of the light.
Reptile carpet is perfectly safe for bearded dragons and recommended. I personally use ceramic tile though($0.30 a tile), because they are easy to wipe off, and hold heat. Unlike the other commenter, I never recommend loose substrate, or at least never bark and sand. The natural habitat of bearded dragons would be hard, compacted clay. It doesn't matter the age, all dragons are at risk of impaction on sand, and it just isn't something necessary for their care. Health and safety always comes before how pretty your tank is. if you want a more natural looking tank, then it's not the expensive or hard to make a false rock habitat, which gives your the natural look, without risking ingestion of substrate.
http://www.beardeddragon.org/articles/falserock/ I don't know what size Zilla's 40 gallon is, but make sure it is 36(L)x18(W/D)x16(H). This is the bare minimum you should keep a dragon in. The extra inches on the width/depth make it more comfortable for a growing dragon.
To measure the temperature in your tank use a digital probe type thermometer on each size of the tank. Alternatively an accurate temperature gun can be used. As an example of a digital probe:
http://www.bigappleherp.com/Big-Apple-Deluxe-Thermometers-Humidity-Gauges Those round kind, and the strip kind that stick to the cage are horribly inaccurate. You risk burning your reptile or not providing enough heat.
Here is an old photo of my male's tank. Not much has changed though. He's go himself a second hammock now, I replaced the UVB fixture with Big Apple Herp's fluorescent fixtures, and I got a new thermometer/hygrometer also from Big Apple Herp, since the old thermometer on his hammock just died on me one day. Ignore the strip in the top left corner. His previous owner put it there, and I have no idea how to get it off/would rather ignore it. The other half of the lid top is on the floor(I had just opened the tank to feed him)

You didn't ask, but I highly recommend checking this website out for the nutritional content of food, and what you should never feed you dragon.
http://www.beautifuldragons.com/Nutrition.html