“…A 47% prevalence of ophthalmic disease has been recently documented in a population of captive leopard geckos over a 19‐year period, and a statistical association has been found between ophthalmic disease and a lack of dietary vitamin A supplementation (Wiggans et al., ). Hypovitaminosis A has been reported in veiled chameleons ( Chamaeleo calyptratus ) (Dierenfeld, Norkus, Carroll, & Fergusion, ; Ferguson, ; Hoby et al., ), green iguanas ( Iguana iguana ) (Raila, Schuhmacher, Gropp, & Schweigert, ), various terrapins (Elkan & Zwart, ; Millichamp, Jacobson, & Wolf, ), box turtles ( Terrapene carolina ) (Boyer, ; Kroenlein et al., ) and crocodilians (Ariel, Ladds, & Buenviaje, ) among others. Typical lesions induced by hypovitaminosis A include conjunctival squamous metaplasia, which has also been reported in leopard geckos (Wiggans et al., ).…”