In animal eyes of the camera type longitudinal chromatic aberration causes defocus that is particularly severe in species with short depth of focus. In a variety of vertebrates, multifocal optical systems compensate for longitudinal chromatic aberration by concentric zones of different refractive powers. Since a constricting circular pupil blocks peripheral zones, eyes with multifocal optical systems often have slit pupils that allow light to pass through all zones, irrespective of the state of pupil constriction. Birds have circular pupils and were therefore assumed to have monofocal optical systems. We examined the eyes of 45 species (12 orders) of bird using videorefractometry, and the results are surprising: 29 species (10 orders) have ...
Birds are assumed to use half of their cones (double cones) to detect fine spatial detail while thei...
The shift from a diurnal to nocturnal lifestyle in vertebrates is generally associated with either e...
Voß J, Bischof H-J. Eye movements of laterally eyed birds are not independent. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENT...
Animal eyes that are primarily used under low-light conditions usually have optical systems of short...
The eyes of many terrestrial vertebrates have slit-shaped pupils. A new hypothesis links this pupil ...
Birds exhibit a variable retinal organization in terms of foveas and areas of high cell density. The...
Animals gather information from their environment to reduce uncertainty and make adaptive decisions,...
Avian eyes are big both in relative and absolute terms, thus the importance of vision to birds is ob...
Since the birth of visual ecology, comparative studies on how birds see their world have been limite...
Budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus) and Bourke's parrots (Neopsephotus bourkii) are closely relate...
We have studied accommodation behaviour in the barn owl (Tyto alba). By defocussing one eye with var...
We studied visual optics using ophthalmoscopy in six species of coraciform birds, five species from ...
Bird colour vision is mediated by single cones, while double cones and rods mediate luminance vision...
The Night Parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis) is a rare, nocturnal parrot species that has largely escap...
Vision is essential for birds, but the metabolic demands of retinal processing, and also the costs o...
Birds are assumed to use half of their cones (double cones) to detect fine spatial detail while thei...
The shift from a diurnal to nocturnal lifestyle in vertebrates is generally associated with either e...
Voß J, Bischof H-J. Eye movements of laterally eyed birds are not independent. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENT...
Animal eyes that are primarily used under low-light conditions usually have optical systems of short...
The eyes of many terrestrial vertebrates have slit-shaped pupils. A new hypothesis links this pupil ...
Birds exhibit a variable retinal organization in terms of foveas and areas of high cell density. The...
Animals gather information from their environment to reduce uncertainty and make adaptive decisions,...
Avian eyes are big both in relative and absolute terms, thus the importance of vision to birds is ob...
Since the birth of visual ecology, comparative studies on how birds see their world have been limite...
Budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus) and Bourke's parrots (Neopsephotus bourkii) are closely relate...
We have studied accommodation behaviour in the barn owl (Tyto alba). By defocussing one eye with var...
We studied visual optics using ophthalmoscopy in six species of coraciform birds, five species from ...
Bird colour vision is mediated by single cones, while double cones and rods mediate luminance vision...
The Night Parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis) is a rare, nocturnal parrot species that has largely escap...
Vision is essential for birds, but the metabolic demands of retinal processing, and also the costs o...
Birds are assumed to use half of their cones (double cones) to detect fine spatial detail while thei...
The shift from a diurnal to nocturnal lifestyle in vertebrates is generally associated with either e...
Voß J, Bischof H-J. Eye movements of laterally eyed birds are not independent. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENT...