"I think they're the first people to come up with a convincing explanation," she says, "for why the orientation should be chosen differently depending on your ecological niche. Read wasn't on the research team, but she says its conclusions seem right to her. "It's just an ordinary observation that anyone could make, and yet apparently it wasn't known to science." "I've spent a lot of time handling horses, and having them put their head down to eat, and up to look around, and so on, and I had never noticed this," says Jenny Read, a vision scientist at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom. "And that's kind of remarkable, because the eyes have to spin in opposite directions in the head." "When they pitch their head down, their eyes rotate in the head to maintain parallelism with the ground," says Banks. When the researchers went to watch the animals in action, they discovered something unexpected. Anisocoria is a condition in which the two pupils of the. And creatures like horses and sheep are constantly pitching their heads down to graze. Your pupils are usually the same size as each other, dilating and constricting together as the light level decreases and increases. This trick would only work if the animal's pupils were parallel with the horizon. That makes sense, he says, because it gives prey animals a panoramic view, so they can best scan all directions for danger.īut then the scientists began to wonder. Meanwhile, he says, if you're the kind of animal that gets hunted, "you're very likely to have a horizontal pupil" and to have your eyes on the side of your head. In general, round pupils seem to be common in taller hunters that actively chase down their prey, says Banks. "So for example foxes, in the dog lineage, have vertical pupils, but wolves have round pupils," he says.Īnd while a small pet cat has vertical slits, Sprague says, "the larger predators, like lions and tigers, have round pupils." Some frogs have heart-shaped pupils, while geckos have pupils that look like pinholes arranged in a vertical line. "There are some weird ones out there," says Martin Banks, a vision scientist at the University of California, Berkeley.Ĭuttlefish have pupils that look like the letter "W," and dolphins have pupils shaped like crescents. The pupil is the hole that lets light in, and it comes in lots of different shapes. The shape of the animal's pupil, it turns out, is closely related to the animal's size and whether it's a predator or prey. Scientists have now done the first comprehensive study of these three kinds of pupils. And the eyes of other animals, like goats and horses, have slits that are horizontal. But a tiger has round pupils - like humans do. Take a close look at a house cat's eyes and you'll see pupils that look like vertical slits. Bottom row, from left: domestic cat, horse, gecko. Can you guess which eyes belong to what animal? Top row, from left: cuttlefish, lion, goat.
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