Reptile Heat Lamp Safety

There are different options to choose from when it comes to heating sources for a reptile enclosure, and one option is a heat lamp. When choosing a heating element for a reptile enclosure, it is important to consider safety requirements and potential risks that apply to each option and your situation.
  1. Significance

    • Heat lamps are lighting or ceramic bulb fixtures that put off enough heat to keep a reptile enclosure at the right temperature. Most reptiles like it warm, and heat lamps are one of several options to provide the heat they need.

    Types

    • There are two basic types of heat lamps: those that provide light and heat and those that only provide heat. Both work in the average reptile enclosure, but only when you use them properly. Ceramic and light bulb heat lamps can provide a significant amount of heat, but getting too close or touching the heat lamp can harm you or your reptile. Incandescent bulbs, spotlights or floodlights, reptile basking lights and infrared heat lamps are all usable for the purpose of heating a reptile enclosure. Heat lamps that provide both light and heat can only be used during daylight hours, or they disrupt the sleep cycle for the reptile. Both day and night light heating elements may be necessary.

    Effects

    • An unsafe heat lamp can cause serious harm to the sensitive skin of many species of reptile. A reptile can become seriously hurt or may even die from heat lamp burns, or can overheat if it stays too close to a heat lamp for too long. When you use a heat lamp in a reptile enclosure, it is important to consider the heat the fixture is providing and how it's going to affect the reptile living inside.

    Placement

    • Reptile heat lamps are best used with glass terrariums and other cages. Some plastic cages have special receptacles that a heat lamp can be placed on, but not every reptile enclosure can accommodate a heat lamp. Most reptile heat lamps have a metal dome that supports the bulb, and you can place the dome directly on the top of some habitats, while others have to be clipped on or attached over the enclosure. The right habitat, bulb and dome combination is important for your reptile. Group fluorescent and UVA/UVB or basking lights together on a single side of the enclosure rather than separating or spreading them out across the length of the habitat.

    Considerations

    • Reptiles have different heating requirements in the day and the nighttime. Some reptiles change positions in their habitat depending on the hour, and providing a heat lamp that is too hot can cause problems. Consider both day and nighttime temperature requirements of the reptile when acquiring and setting your heat lamp.

    Solution

    • It is important to invest in a good working thermometer to ensure reptile heat lamp safety. When you have an accurate thermometer, you can keep track of temperature fluctuations in the habitat and regulate appropriately. You should be monitoring all aspects of the reptile enclosure for temperature changes, especially just beneath and around the heat lamp.