Eye sight

If I am not mistaken, the only difference between their vision (not their field of view) and our vision, is that they can see ultraviolet as well. So no, they can not see in the dark.
 
If I am not mistaken, the only difference between their vision (not their field of view) and our vision, is that they can see ultraviolet as well. So no, they can not see in the dark.

Another thing you may notice, They tend to have poor depth perception unless both eyes are focused on the same thing. Quite humorous at times. With one eye looking back at you, and the other eye looking towards a branch it's reaching out to grab, it may miss once in a while. But when it's hunting dinner, and both eyes focus on the meal, errors are seldom.
 
Thanks for the responses I figured that they couldn't considering they are diurnal! And yes I notice my guy reaching for a branch that's both there often if he's focusing on something else as we'll!
 
Another thing you may notice, They tend to have poor depth perception unless both eyes are focused on the same thing. Quite humorous at times. With one eye looking back at you, and the other eye looking towards a branch it's reaching out to grab, it may miss once in a while. But when it's hunting dinner, and both eyes focus on the meal, errors are seldom.

But, even though they may seem to have less depth perception when their eyes are focused in different spots, they still have some unlike just about every other animal. Each eye has a sort of "double lens" that permits it which is why a cham blinded in one eye can learn to compensate and hunt successfully. One-eyed wc chams are not that uncommon. It could be more of a brain function limitation (its a lot harder to process two completely different sets of visual information at the same time after all) than an eye issue. Considering how complex this would be I think they do amazingly well at it and I wish I had such fantastic eyes!
 
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