Wasps have okay eyesight, they can see faces of other wasps to identify them, their eyes are like motion detectors and they have sharper vision because of bigger eyes catching more light. Wasps still have low resolution and a difficult time seeing at night.
Wasps have two large compound eyes. A compound eye is a single eye made up of many individual photo-reception units, so that some people simplify the description and say that there are hundreds of eyes. They also have three simple eyes, called ocelli set in a triangle on the top of the head. The ocelli don't form images and are really just simple light receptors. It is thought they help the wasp orient itself in flight.
Wasps have very poor night vision and normally don't fly at that time. They return to their nests at night where they remain until daybreak.
no. not only do they see colours they can also see UV light
They don't have very good eyesight but honey badger's are some of the toughtest animals ever.
yes very very very smart
compond eyes
No
Yes.
if you ask them what color it is and they say i do not see a color!
Yes but it is more likely in males. The reason for this is women have two X chromosomes, and men have one X and one Y chromosome. The gene for color sight is found on the X chromosome. If a woman has a defective gene on her X chromosome, she has another to back it up. If a man has a defective gene on his X chromosome, he does not. Both X chromosomes have to be defective in the same way for a woman to be color blind, which is the reason why it is so rare. Male colorblindness, on the other hand, is quite common because the gene is not necessary and therefore the people with it don't get weeded out of the Gene Pool. If a necessary gene is defective, you die, and it does not get passed on. It has to mutate again.
Genes are the things that make you you. They come in 23 pairs and they decide lots of things like what colour your hair, eyes or skin is and whether or not you're colour blind. Each cell contains a full set of these and if you didn't have them, you wouldn't be here. You wouldn't exist. No life would exist, even plants.
no insects are blind
no.they are not colour blind they can even see uv light
No
Like Colour to the Blind was created in 1998.
Like Colour to the Blind has 340 pages.
Colour Blind - 2004 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:MA
No.
no
The ISBN of Like Colour to the Blind is 978-1-85302-720-8.
No. Cows are not totally colour-blind as they can only see in blues and yellows, making them dichromatic animals.
Their yellow and black bands are a warning that they can sting.
The males are ususally colour blind.
the counting crows sung colour blind