Certainly not. First, H sapiens is a sort of animal. Second, there is an enormous body both of experimental evidence and of anecdote showing that various sorts of animals see various colors. (The usual way of testing is to train an animal to identify sources of reward by color.)
no
No, because humans are animals only a few humans are colorblind.
no, many see color and into the UV range.
All dogs are color blind
no cobras are not blind but like alot of other animals they can't see color so they ARE color blind but not flat out blind.
Lizards and dogs.Another answerNo, dogs are not colored blind.
No. It is a common misconception that many animals such as dogs see in black and white. In reality, most mammals, including raccoons, can see color. However, they cannot see the full range of colors that humans can.
yes they do but are color blind
No, there is no color blind test for animals that you can do at home. There actually is no color blind test at all, only tests to check their vision if they can see at all.
No, not all animals are color blind. Some see less color pigmentation than others, which as a general rule would be those animals with good night vision. People, which by definition are animals, are for the most part, not color blind.
yes there are like the dog
Humans and chimps.
All dogs are color blind
Humans and Chimps are the only animals that are not color blind.
Yes, all dogs are color blind.
yes all theropists can be color blind
ALL dogs- all breeds, all sexes- are color blind.
no cobras are not blind but like alot of other animals they can't see color so they ARE color blind but not flat out blind.
All animals aren't color blind. Primates probably have very similar color vision to humans. (some) Birds and insects see more colors than humans. Cats, dogs and livestock sees fewer/weaker colors than humans
they don't because they are color blind.