to help science
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.
I think so. After all, scientists have found a way to make rabbits glow-in-the-dark with the hormone taken from the jellyfish and more.
giraffes
Because in dark our eyes can catch....
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.
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.
Animals' eyes appear to glow in the dark due to a layer called the tapetum lucidum, a reflective layer behind the retina that helps animals see better in low light conditions. Humans do not possess this reflective layer in their eyes, so our eyes do not exhibit the same glowing effect in the dark.
Some creative ideas for glow-in-the-dark Halloween decorations include using glow-in-the-dark paint to create spooky silhouettes on windows, making glowing ghost lanterns using jars and glow sticks, and hanging glow-in-the-dark bats or spiders from the ceiling for a creepy effect.
Look it up on YouTube I just posted a video about making your own glow in the dark nail polish it is called how to make your own glow in the dark nail polish hope it will help you
No, Glow in the Dark Silly Bandz are neat because the glow in the dark!
I'm not sure if they make glow in the dark, but they make neon and if that is not good enough, you can buy glow in the dark fabric paint and turn them glow in the dark by yourself. they will be your custom designed glow in the dark converse if you do it by yourself
Yes, it actually does glow in the dark. It says that the rescue me is the glow in the dark.