Sheep's eyes are located on the sides of their heads. They are located up near the ears on other side of the head.
a Say a deer there eyes are on the side as they are normally caught be foxes and foxes's eyes are on the sideSo basically we are predators
The reasoning for this is because the lion needs to know how far away the prey is so their eyes are on the front of their heads so they can determine how far away the prey is
It's a lion, not a lizard. The reason that the lion's eyes are on the front of its head is because it is a predator and not the prey. So it does not need to watch out for predators coming to attack it in the way a lizard does. Having eyes on the side of its head would help it to see more things, but having both eyes in the front of its head helps it to judge distances (depth perception).
The eyes are positioned at the side of a cow's head to enable her to have a near 360-degree field of vision.
Known as binocular vision, this arrangement allows both eyes to focus on the same object. The benefit in depth perception and triangulation is a distinct advantage in hunting prey.
They have eyes on the side of their heads.
side of head.
are giraffes eyes on thir side of their heads or in the front
It may seem that it is on its side but it is definitely on the front.
The eyes of a koala are basically positioned in the front of its head, though they are set back a little.
it needs to have 3d depth and you can not get that when the eyes are on the side of your head. they need this because they a predators
No. They belong to the group called predators and they have eyes to the front of their head. Prey have eyes on the side of their heads so that they can see what is coming.
The eyes are on the sides of the head so the horse can see the predators when they attack so they will be able to run away.
the butterflies eyes are the side of there head.
Because his eyes work like ours, and he needs to have more dexterity for hunting with eyes on the side of his head he has no dex at all
One either side of its head above and behind the mouth and in front of the gills.
All predators have there eyes in the front of the head to "zoom" in on the prey, as the prey has there eyes on the side of there head to get a more pamoramic view so that they can catch the predator "preying" on them. The horse has there eyes on the side of there head so they are prey. You never saw a horse hunt something, they flee.