If it's pitch dark they don't, they rely on smell and their whiskers.
No, there isn't any way to find the mouse with its receiver.
a mouse can see about 15 cm a way but in dark can see 2cm away
Yes, a mouse can find its way back to your house if it has a strong sense of smell and memory of the route.
They have special eyes to see in the dark.
the best colors are if light to be bright if dark be shinny dark I Love my mouse and he is gray and white!
yes
The mouse will turn out to be a normal shade of brown.
The answer is no!It sees all different colours in different ways,black is a tricky colour for a mouse to see as they arn`t so much nocturnal and their bodies find it hard to comunicate with other species of animals.
seeing in the dark, to help them find there way around
The plot of the mouse story book I recently read follows a small mouse who goes on an adventure to find food and encounters various challenges along the way.
It should be:Neither the mouse nor the rats could find their way through the maze.ANS2:I will venture to postulate that the "its" could refer to an antecedent that had been presented in a preceding sentence: (The cheese was wrapped hermetically in plastic and dragged through the maze.) Neither the mouse nor the rats could find its way through the maze.In this case, the rodents were unable to find the way of the cheese (its way) so, the sentence makes perfect grammatical sense.Also, the rodents may have not all followed the same path...such being the nature of trial-and-error solutions. In that case, each rodent would have to find its own way and force you to make "way" plural.Neither the mouse nor the rats could find their ways through the maze.
It is unlikely that a mouse will return if you release it into the wild. Mice are known to have strong homing instincts and will likely try to find their way back to their original location.