Sharks can only see in shades of grey.
Findings from a study by Australian scientists, released in September 2012, show that sharks' eyes have just one type of cone opsin - or light-sensitive proteins found in the photoreceptor cells of the retina - instead of thevtwo or more that are needed to see colour. Cone opsins are used to help animals see in bright light, and to differentiate between colours.
no. :)
Blind sharks are named so because they have very small eyes and rely more on their other senses such as smell and electroreception to navigate and hunt for prey in the dark depths of the ocean. They are not completely blind but have limited vision compared to other sharks.
yes
No but you where.
45 pounds
No, they can see rather well.
yes there stupid what do you think? they are blind people
a carb who has a blind eye.
Yes i think so ..
not that i know of. i know that there's a shark called the Greenland shark and is basically blind because of the parasite worm that grows over it's eyelids causing the shark to be blind. hope this helps
Sharks don't "go" anywhere. There are some sharks in the waters around Spain.
everything can go blind in a waycan you go blind if you stay in the darkness?yes