There are certain colors that dogs can see. Their cones and rods are like ours but there are some difference in them. They have certain hues that are not visible
Dogs can see some pigments and not others. It is very much like red/green colorblindness: they can see blue and yellow, but red and green appear grayish to them.
Dogs have dichromatic vision, meaning they have two types of color receptors (blue and yellow/green) compared to humans, who have three types (red, green, and blue). They see the world in shades of blue and yellow, lack red and green color vision, and have better vision in low light conditions.
no they do not seen in b/w they are coulor blind the can see certin coulor's Dogs are dichromatic. Their vision is like red-green color blindness. They can distinguish different shades of grey.
dogs can't see red or green, so there vision consists of blues, yellows, purple and shades of grey, the world through a dogs eyes eyes is much less colourful than what humans can see.
Dogs are red-green colour-blind, like many humans. They can see other colours.
because it is mouldy
Yes, they see colors. But only shades of green and yellow.
Yes they can you just cant see it.
Actually, dogs see in color. They see as a human who has red-green color blindness, so they see red as green and green as red and yellow as grey. other than that, due to a study done recently, they have both rods (associated with how you see at night) and cones (associated with what you see in the day)dogs and cats both see black and white but dogs see green, red, blue, and yellow sometimes and cats see green, blue, and yellow
no it was never green cant you see?
Green discharge is a sign of infection. Go see your veterinarian.
No some animals can see in negative color. some dogs cant see hardly anything. others can see colors but are color blind meaning they see colors as different colors. for example some people can see red when they are really looking at green.