the pupil itself has the same job as a normal pupil would. It may look alittle diffrent depending on the person's condition. but otherwise no. it does not change
yes
No! As long as the kitten's eye looks normal and has a pupil then it's fine. I have a semi-feral kitten who is blind in one eye. His eye is completley gray with no pupil. The kitten and his brother have brown eyes, apart from the blind eye which is gray! :P
There is one pupil in each eye. The pupil is the opening in the center of the iris that allows light to enter the eye. Its size can change depending on the lighting conditions to regulate the amount of light entering the eye.
This is the circular opening in the centre of the iris, and changes size in different lighting conditions. The pupil is normally black, but if the eye is lit up inside, such as when a camera flash goes off, the color of the interior of the eye will be visible and the pupil will. THE PUPIL IS SOMETHING THAT YOU USE EVERYDAY IF YOU ARE BLIND.
The eyes constrict, not dilate, when a light is shone into the eye...this is a multi-arc process going through the parasympathetic nervous system and the EW nucleus.
The pupil is an opening into the center of the eyeball, where the retina (visual receptor layer) is located.The pupil is located in the front center of the eyeball, and its size (aperture) is controlled by the iris or colored part of the eye. The pupil is just behind the cornea, or lens, that focuses light on the interior surface of the eye (the retina).
The pupil is the black center part of the eye.
I'm guessing (an educated guess) that the cloudy eye is blind.Usually, when an eye becomes blind, it gets clouded over. I don't know why.
yes they have eyes, they just don't work...
Pupil is to eye as nostril is to nose
it could be an eye infection or it caught somthing in its eye OR it possibly going blind in that eye
You Are The Pupil Of A Eye.
The pupil is the opening in the center of the iris (the colored part of the eye) that allows light to enter the eye. By dilating or constricting, the pupil controls the amount of light reaching the retina at the back of the eye.