[Dragaera] night vision
Jerry Friedman
jerry_friedman at yahoo.com
Tue Jul 22 19:20:27 PDT 2008
--- On Tue, 7/22/08, Mia McDavid <mia_mcdavid at comcast.net> wrote:
> From: Mia McDavid <mia_mcdavid at comcast.net>
> Subject: Re: [Dragaera] night vision
> To: dragaera at lists.dragaera.info
> Date: Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 5:37 PM
> Howard Brazee wrote:
>
> > Look at which birds have eyes on the side, and which
> have eyes in
> > front. Prey have their eyes on the side. Predators
> are better off
> > with binocular vision - especially flying predators.
> It's important to
> > be able to judge exactly when swooping down on a
> mouse, and not crash
> > into the ground. Prey would rather see a larger
> angle to avoid being caught.
>
> And what is a jhereg? A carnivore, to be sure, but I
> understood it to
> be pretty much entirely a scavenger. That means that its
> food is
> stationary, but it has to watch out for predators or larger
> scavengers while it eats.
Delurking since people mentioned birds. Most predators
are also prey. According to Dunne, Sutton, and Sibley,
in /Hawks in Flight/, one consistent difference between
hawks and eagles is that when hawks eat prey they've got
on the ground, they look behind them first; eagles don't.
(In North America, anyway.) So that's hawks' predator
anatomy and prey behavior.
Jerry Friedman
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