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I learned this today while dissecting a cow's eye in my lab class. Human's don't have the tapetum lucidum layer. This is present in animal eyes. It's what causes them to glow in the dark. There sometimes is a rare occurrence when it does happen in humans, which causes them to lose their sight. I don't remember the name of the disease that my professor said it is though.
Because they have similar eye capacity.. only the cow has the tapetum and colour blindness
we don't have one!!!!!!!!!
The cow's eye is bigger, its iris is only one color, it has a tapetum, its corneas are tougher. the iris is brown on a cow and on humans its many different colors, and the tapetum is what allows animals to see well in the dark which is something a human doesnt have. :) ur welcome
tapetum
The reflective layer in the lining of the eye is called the tapetum lucidum.
Bears eyes dont glow because they dont have the tapetum lucidum that make there eys glow. A large number of animals have the tapetum lucidum, including deer, dogs, cats, cattle, horses and ferrets. Humans don't, and neither do some other primates. Squirrels, kangaroos and pigs don't have the tapeta, either.
the tapetum lucidum is what reflects the light
When I did a dissection of a cow's eye in biology, we came across this term. The tapetum lucidum, which is not found in the human eye, functions to reflect light onto the retina. It especailly helps with night vision since it can reflect light even at very low intensities. It is shiny, glittering with a bluish colour.A specialized surface reflects the light within the eye and is found in the eyes of animals that live under conditions of low-intensity light. Not found in humans.
They both reflect light.
Dont take this question seriously.
the answer is Tapetum I went to outdoor science school and my naturalist told us she study trees the forest and human body