Animals having color vision have cone cells in retina.
Because they are extremely fat xD
Yes a cone cell does have nucleus because all cells have nucleus
well there are about 4.5 million cone cells in the human retina.
The retina has two kinds of light sensitive cells, called photoreceptors, the rod and the cone cells. Rod cells are sensitive to absolute light levels (not color vision) while cone cells are used for color vision.
Yes, a pine cone is made up of cells. Everything except perhaps pure Energy is made up of molecules, but only things that are living or were living are made up of cells. A pine cone is created by a living organism (tree) and therefore the pine cone must be made up of cells.
The rod and cone cells in our eyes are one of our major senses. This is the sense of sight. The taste buds in our tongues are another one of our major senses. This is the sense of taste.
The eye .In there eye there is rod cells and cone cells. Rod cells detect color and Cone cells detect black and white. The cone cells let you see in the dark.
like us humans, a bobcat has more rod cells than cone cells
You have rod cells and cone cells as receptors in your eye. Rods are for intensity of the light. Cone cells are for color vision.
Cone cells, or cones, are photoreceptor cells in the retina of the eye which function best in relatively bright light. The cone cells gradually become sparser towards the periphery of the retina.
cytology!
yes
Cone cells
Rod cells are sensitive to dim light, while cone cells help you see colors.
Yes a cone cell does have nucleus because all cells have nucleus
rod and cone cells
When cone cells add up red and green light, they perceive yellow light. This is because red light and green light stimulate different cone cells in the retina, which the brain interprets as yellow.
There are cone cells in your retina. They give you perception of colour. You have cone cells which perceive blue, green and red colours. So cones cells which perceive blue colour are stimulated by high frequency light waves. Green light is perceived by cone cells, which are stimulated by light waves of medium frequency. Red light is perceived by cone cells, which are stimulated by light waves of low frequency. This is one of the unimaginable adaptation of the human eye. With more or less stimulation of these three primary types of cone cells, you can perceive the thousands of different colours.