No animals have eyes that glow in the dark. Some animals, particularly nocturnal predators, have a REFLECTIVE layer behind the retina, to improve their vision in poor light conditions. But these don't glow, they reflect incoming light. No incoming light, no reflection, no glow.
giraffes
No. Go to a museum and you will see ancient bones of people and animals they do not glow.
Scorpions do...
to help science
Humans create them!
I think it's the angler fish :)
Yes, possum's eyes do glow in the dark and they are naucturnal and most animals that are naucturnal or can see in the dark have eyes that glow in the dark.
Because in dark our eyes can catch....
Most animal's eyes glow in the dark because they are adapt to seeing at night. Human's eyes don't glow in the dark because we do not see at night as well.
Making glow in the dark animals consists of inserting a gene from an animal that normally expresses flourescence (a jellyfish, for instance) into the genome of another organism.
Animals eyes do not glow, their eyes only reflect light. This reflection of light, which appears to make the animal's eye glow, is called eyeshine and it is caused by the tapetum lucidum, which is a layer of tissue in the eyes of many vertebrate animals. The tapetum lucidum allows the animal to see better in low-light situations (such as after dark) by reflecting the light back into the retina. When a photo is taken of an animal that has tapetum lucidum in it's eyes, the light reflected from the flash of the photo often makes the eyes appear to glow. The same thing occurs when light is flashed into the eyes of animals that contain tapetum lucidum after dark.