Cephalopods, including octopuses and squid, have some of the most incredible colour-changing abilities in nature.
They can almost instantly blend in with their surroundings to evade predators or lay in wait, and put on colourful displays to attract mates or dazzle potential prey.
This is impressive enough on its own, but becomes even more amazing when you discover these creatures are in fact colourblind – they only have one type of light receptor in their eyes, meaning they can only see in black and white.
So how do they know what colours to change to at all?
This has puzzled biologists for decades but a father/son team of scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard University think the unusual shape of their pupils holds the key, and they can see colour after all.
Cephalopods have wide U-shaped or dumbbell-shaped pupils, which allow light into the lens from many directions.
When light enters the pupils in human eyes it gets focused on one spot, cutting down on blur from the light being split into its constituent colours.
The scientists believe cephalopod eyes work the opposite way – the wide pupils split the light up and then individual colours can be focused on the retina by changing the depth of the eyeball and moving the pupil around.
The price for this is blurry vision, but it does mean they could make out colours in a unique way to any other animals.
Processing colour this way is more computationally intensive than other types of colour vision and likely requires a lot of brainpower, which might explain in part why cephalopods are the most intelligent invertebrates on Earth.
Read the paper
Images: Roy Caldwell, Klaus Stiefel, Alexander Stubbs
by Daichin Khu
@mezerg_
Short-eared dogs or jungle dogs (Atelocynus microtis) are a unique and elusive canid species endemic to the Amazonian basin. Since short-eared dogs favor undisturbed habitats, wild sightings are rare. What is known about the species is due mostly to a semi-wild animal named Oso (bottom photo) who was the subject of a ten-year study. The species is threatened by feral dogs, habitat destruction, and diseases like rabies and distemper. (x x x x)
Did you know?
images of the Sun captured during the first year of NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) mission.
Credit: NASA/SDO
Striges
American heavy fighter designed before WW2 but extensively used in it from start to finish, which as the war progressed was also used for interception, dive bombing, level bombing, ground attack, night fighting, photo reconnaissance, radar and visual pathfinding for bombers and evacuation missions, and as a long-range escort fighter, a true jack of all trades, and an instrumental asset of the american air power during the early stages of the Pacific War due to her long range.