eyespots are found on the ends of the arms of a starfish...
the girl caterpillar will be brown and have large ''eyespots''. the boy will be green and have smaller ''eyespots''
Yes,
light.
starfish dont really have eyes the have eyespots like some worms. starfish cant see with their eyespots but they can sense sunlight
No, plant cells do not have eyespots. Eyespots are present in certain unicellular organisms like Euglena, serving as light-sensing organelles to help them move towards light sources. Plants do not require eyespots as they rely on other mechanisms for responding to light.
Eyespots are located at the tip of each ray on a starfish. A Starfish can only discern light and dark with it's eyespots.
The huge eyespots on the wings of some butterflies are there to confuse and put off an attack from a predator who wishes to catch and eat the butterflies.
No, eyespots do not help worms move around. Eyespots are simple light-sensitive organs that help worms detect changes in light intensity and are used to determine which direction light is coming from, not for movement. Worms primarily use their muscles and body contractions to move.
There are 34 different brown butterflies with eyespots. White peacock, small wood nymph, common wood nymph, and the blue-eyed sailor are just a few of the species.
A starfish's eyespots are found at the end of each arm, near the tips. They are sensitive to light and can detect changes in brightness, helping the starfish navigate and locate prey.
Allows the flatworm to detect amounts of light.
eye spots