NO there is no animal that have their mouth above their eyes
some fishes
They are mainly small animals which can fit in the mouths so that they can kill it eaisly
Rats, mice, frogs, crayfish, and any other animals that will fit in their mouths.
With there eyes (if they have any!)
Animals with eyes not sensitive to light (there might not be any?). Animals will not react to rainbows as they are not important for the animals survival.
Any type of mammal or bird
I don't have any idea!
Like any other animal with their eyes closed.
An archerfish is any of the species o fish in the Toxotidae family, who prey on small animals near to the surface of water by shooting them with water from their mouths.
They don't. If you're referring to the shape of their pupils - many animals have eyes like that. Mostly reptiles.
Yes, most animals like cheese, and dogs are among one of the few animals that do not just like cheese, they love cheese. My dogs eat any piece of cheese they can get their mouths around. When I dropped a stick of smoked cheddar, they ran up and started fighting over it.
6 mouths
No animals have eyes that glow at night. For an animal's eyes to glow at night, the animal's eyes would have to have a light source within them, and no animal has a light source within its eyes. Let's look a bit more closely. We often see footage (a video or the like) of animals where the film was shot at night. To see animals at night, we often use light sources that are not within the visible spectrum (and, thus, are invivible to animals), like infrared. In any case, the light source is pointed at the subjects (the animals), and the camera, which is sensitive to that frequency (or wavelength, if you prefer) of light captures the action. The "trick" is that the light will be reflected off the retina of the animals that look at the light source, and this reflection wil be picked up by the camera. It will appear that the animal has luminous (glowing) eyes, but it's really an optical trick. A number of animals can see well at night because light that enters their eyes and is reflected off the retina can be "re-reflected" back onto the retina to improve the resolving power of the animal's vision. As stated above, no animals have light sources within their eyes. And many animals have a retina that will reflect enough of the light from a film maker's source back into the camera lens, thus making the animal's eyes appear to "glow" in the night.