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Right Eye / Left Eye look different

165 views 2 replies 2 participants last post by  BlxssxmingWings  
#1 ·
I was just sitting near the cage talking to Melemele when I saw his/her eye. The left eye look just fine. But the right eye seems to have something over it. - like it is covered up by something.

Do birds have eyelids like we do? Is that all I am seeing?

I need to serach the Internet about this Google first...

But has anyone seen this? Is it normal? I hope he/she is okay.




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#2 ·
So, that was quick. I found this right away from BirdNote, a partner of the National Audubon Society.



Transcript:

This is BirdNote.

For most birds, keen eyesight is absolutely critical — for finding food, spotting predators, and generally staying alive. But many birds lead lives that could be very hard on the eyes: like flying at breakneck speed, racing for cover into a dense thicket, or diving under water to capture a spiny, struggling fish.

Fortunately, birds have evolved a structure for protecting their eyes. Like humans, they have upper and lower outer eyelids. But beneath the outer eyelids lies an extra eyelid, called the nictitating membrane. Nictitating, for all its alliterative syllables, simply means “blinking”. This extra eyelid is hinged at the inner side of the eye and sweeps horizontally across the cornea. The nictitating membrane is largely transparent, and it helps keep the eye moist and clean while guarding it from wind, dust, and hazards.

Birds aren’t the only animals gifted with nature’s goggles. Reptiles and some mammals have the extra eyelid, too. A Polar Bear’s nictitating membrane helps protect its eyes against the intense glare of arctic light, preventing snow blindness.

Nature’s goggles become nature’s sunglasses.

For BirdNote, I’m Mary McCann.