No
Yes, dogs can see rainbows, but they see them differently than humans do. Dogs have dichromatic vision, meaning they see fewer colors compared to humans. They can perceive a range of colors, but their ability to see the different colors in a rainbow may not be as vivid as humans.
No, humans can only see a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, known as visible light. This includes colors of the rainbow ranging from violet to red. Other forms of light, such as infrared and ultraviolet, are invisible to the human eye.
Cats do see colors but not all the colors that humans see. They have fewer color receptors than humans, so the range of colors in a rainbow may appear somewhat different to them. However, it is likely that they can see rainbows to some extent.
Being mythological gods, the Greek Gods could see more colours than the humans they made so we do not have a name for Zeus's favorite color.
black because as it absourbs light true black is invisable to the human eye.
No. only primates see color. Monkeys and humans.
Humans see with color. Dogs simply have less cone receptors therefore they do not see light. Dogs only see in black and white.
Yes, humans can see the color yellow.
Yes, horses can see color, but not nearly as well as humans can. Horse can see only a handful of colors, the others they cannot.
Indeed they are color blind, they cannot see colors that humans can see. But they can see the ultraviolet rays of the sun, that us humans can see.
Birds that you see around in the daytime have phenomenal color vision. Birds see color not only better than humans, but they see color in such a superior way that we humans cannot even begin to understand it. Pretty much all daytime birds can see blue perfectly. Nighttime birds, like owls, are most likely colorblind, though.
They don't see in color, and that is because their eyes aren't as developed as humans'.
Same as humans
the only fish that see colors live in the northern toptopia where they can see colors humans can see
Yes they do they see color better than us humans
The night time ones
This is dependent on which viewpoint one looks at this from. From a human viewpoint, crickets are indeed colorblind in that they cannot see certain colors that humans can see. However they can also see violet and ultraviolet wavelengths which humans cannot see. Crickets can see color, but not the color humans can see.