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"PM Boots For Custom Title"
eyes
i got to thinking last night wile i was baking cookies for an old teacher of mine who was retiring... till 3am... and i was wondering....
when a snake goes into shed and their eyes turn blue can they see????
what do you imagine it's like a blindfold? sunglasses?
is it possible for a snake to go blind???
they see in heat right?? like one of those thermal cameras???
 
S h a n l e y  1.3 eastern garters 1 midland painted turtle 1 bernese mountain dog 1 half siamese cat
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Mountaineer
Re: eyes
Pit vipers see in infared I guess you could say, but garters don't. There vision probably isn't amazing and it's probably motion based.
Last edited by Elliot; 06-24-2008 at 03:41 PM.
Reason: spelling
1.1.1 T.p.orarius Gulf Coast Ribbon
1.0 T.e.vagrans Wandering Garter
Shine on you crazy diamond
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The Golden Snake
Re: eyes
as far as i know yes they can detect heat but they can also see but when they start to shed i would imagin its like putting a blurry piece of blue glass in front of your eyes
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"First shed, A Success"
Re: eyes
they can't detect heat like pythons can they can detect vibrations and probably can picture of what it is in there mind from the vibrations
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Moderator
Re: eyes
When their eyes go blue the vision is impaired, but not lost. The blueness is caused by a natural secretion that is squeezed between the old and the new skins to cause them to separate. The fluid is excreted from two tiny pores in each scale, and it is this which makes the sloughed skin feel damp at first.
It is possible, of course, for a snake to go blind... as it is with any creature.
They don't see 'in heat', they see like us.. only not so well.
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The Golden Snake
Re: eyes
wow james u sure know alot
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Forum Moderator
Re: eyes
This is why snakes become unsettled during shed cycles.
The vision is clouded, here is a simple experiment, next time your snake has blue eyes, leave it undisturbed, then use shadows through the glass to see if you can get it's attention.
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Moderator
Re: eyes
On the subject of 'seeing' in heat.... that's quite misleading. Pit vipers, boas and pythons can detect minute temperature differences, but it nothing like seeing...
Imagine you are in your kitchen, someone drops a spoon on the floor behind you.. you hear it, you know what the sound was because you recognise it, you even have a pretty good idea of exactly where that spoon is now... but in no way did you 'see' it. This is how the heat sensing works, it's an additional sense. On the TV they always use thermal imaging to represent the process, but it's actually a pretty inaccurate way to illustrate it.
Another slight digression .... When a pit viper picks up the warmth of it's prey through it's sensory pits, it gains enough information to locate the prey and commence the striking action.... but of course during the strike the prey animal is still moving, and the viper's heat pits are pointing to the sky! So, the viper has additional heat sensors within the mouth to enable it to make subtle adjustments to the strike to ensure a good 'hit'. Not many people seem to know about these additional heat sensing organs in the mouth...... but now you do!
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Forum Moderator
Re: eyes
I kneel before thee oh wise master
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The Golden Snake
Re: eyes
lol he knows too much get him mwahahaa
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