Saturday 23 May 2015

How an Octopus can see without eyes

The California two spot octopus posesses light sensitive proteins on its skin, revealing that he can “see” with its skin. It doesn’t work the same as eyesight but it has the ability to detect light. This is because the protein, called opsin, that is found in eyes is in the octopus’ skin.

This octopus is considered one of the most intelligent cephalopods and can carry out this ability without the command of the nervous system. Its skin can detect an increase and a decrease in light, meaning that its system works better at brightness than color change.


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