Yes it is for some animals. Possibly because they have too much fat on them
and some animals don't have backbones.
Some different animals that don't have a blind spot which is a unseen spot of unawareness are some different fish and some different rodents.
Well from what I know from experience and study, behind the ears is a very sweet spot for most animals. It depends what kind of animal. Some have it on their stomach, some between the shoulder blades, and some behind the ears/forehead.
The National Parks Service does list wolverines as present in Glacier NP, but these reclusive animals are VERY difficult to spot.
It is VERY difficult to color just a spot.
Shakespeare's puns are difficult to spot because the English language has changed a lot, over the past 400 years.
Animals that don't move because they have afixed themselves to a spot permanently are called "sessile" animals. Some examples are barnacles, sponges, hydroids and corals.
green fly are hard to spot because they are smaller then you think they are
Animals actually do have blind spots. For example, a horse has a blind spot directly in front of it that grows smaller the closer you get.
It is difficult if not impossible to tell somebody what a "spot" is without being able to see it.
Protozoa and animals are more different than similar. But they do have some similarities. They both have a definite shape. They both are mobile. They both eat from a specific spot.
Hello! If you are counting insects with the animals, then most definitely the animals win, because if you stand in one spot on the ground, over 1 million insects are in that spot beneath you.
It is a blind spot. Animals don't usually have a blind spot.