Does your pet have vertical pupils? This is what science says

Pupils’ shape and size can reveal whether an animal is a hunter or the hunted, research shows.

August 09, 2015 03:45 pm | Updated March 29, 2016 02:13 pm IST - New York

For species active both night and day, like domestic cats, slit pupils provide the dynamic range needed to see in dim light and not get blinded by the midday sun.

For species active both night and day, like domestic cats, slit pupils provide the dynamic range needed to see in dim light and not get blinded by the midday sun.

Does your pet have vertical pupils or circular ones? This determines the difference between predator and prey, a study finds. Species with pupils that are vertical slits are more likely to be ambush predators that are active both day and night.

“For species that are active both night and day, like domestic cats, slit pupils provide the dynamic range needed to help them see in dim light yet not get blinded by the midday sun,” said lead researcher Martin Banks, professor of optometry at University of California—Berkeley.

The vertical slits of domestic cats and geckos undergo a 135 and 300-fold change in area between their constricted and dilated states, while humans’ circular pupils undergo a mere 15-fold change, the study said. In contrast, those with horizontally elongated pupils are extremely likely to be plant-eating prey species with eyes on the sides of their heads.

Researchers identified three cues generally used to gauge distance: binocular disparity, motion parallax and blur.Binocular disparity and blur work together with vertically elongated pupils and front-facing eyes. Vertical-slit pupils maximise both cues, the researchers said.

However, vertical pupils are not equally distributed among ambush predators. “A surprising thing we noticed is that the slit pupils were linked to predators that were close to the ground,” said William Sprague, a postdoctoral researcher in Banks’ lab. “So domestic cats have vertical slits, but bigger cats, like tigers and lions, don’t. Their pupils are round, like humans and dogs,” he added.

Vertical pupils appear to maximise the ability of small animals to judge distances of prey, said the findings published in the journal Science Advances.

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