Science, asked by kamalamuthukrishnan1, 4 days ago

which living being can see one object with one eye and the other object with other eye​

Answers

Answered by SakshamAgarwal10B
0

(zoology) A type of vision in which one eye of the animal moves and sees objects independently of the other eye (as opposed to binocular vision wherein both eyes of the animal are used together)

Answered by presentmoment
0

Nocturnal reptiles have smaller eyes than diurnal reptiles, but larger pupillary and lens apertures, as well as a larger cornea.

Explanation:

  • Lizards and chameleons can see one object and the other object with the other eye.
  • Multicolored oil droplets in the photoreceptors of lizards (including geckos) and turtles allow them to see colour. The opsin proteins in the eye's cones have been "calibrated" to detect various wavelengths.
  • This allows many species to see into wavelengths that are beyond the range of unaided human vision, such as the UV range.
  • Lizards use their ciliary muscles and annular pads to squeeze or stretch their lenses to focus on near and remote objects. Light causes pupils to dilate and constrict.
  • The tokay has a stenopaic pupil, which compresses into a vertical slit made up of a linear array of dots. Slit pupils are found in some nocturnal lizards, but circular pupils are found in others.
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