• ryedaft@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      So it’s using physics instead of neurons. That’s still more advanced in my eyes, pun not intended (don’t they also have some special features for circular polarization? My eyes can’t do that).

      • GreatTitEnthusiast@mander.xyz
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        1 month ago

        I’m not sure what you mean by “advanced” but they’re really not

        An Immense World by Ed Yong had a section on Mantis Shrimp and while their fascinating creatures with a really interesting vision system, their color perception isn’t all it’s cracked up to be

        I’m reciting this from memory so if anyone knows better please correct me:

        Mantis Shrimp have compound eyes with three sections: 1) the main section detects movement and is what they primarily use to see 2) the second section detects color. When the shrimp detects movement it will look at whatever it was with it’s color detecting section to determine if it’s prey or predator. This is a whole separate section of the eye and is unlike how ours function. The reason why the shrimp has so many detectors is because, unlike our eyes, the shrimps eyes don’t combine different color receptors to see color. The book likened it to a bar code scanner that uses the presence of certain color combinations to detect what’s there 3) one really neat thing the mantis Shrimp can do is see spiralized polarized light. We cannot see polarized light but there’s a lot of b polarized light under the ocean so seeing it is fairly common. What’s NOT common is polarized light that travels as a spiral. Mantis Shrimp seem to have evolved the ability to create spiralized polarized light and use it to communicate. As far as we know no other animal can make or see it.

      • Ranger
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        1 month ago

        Squid have better arranged eyes then us but I don’t know much about Mantis Shrimp eyes.