Do critters who view the world through different spectrums see film photographs the same way as they would in the wild? E.g. would a bee see a picture of a flower as glowing?slaughtermouse@lemmy.world to No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world – 51 points – 1 years ago15Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsI believe no. Bees see ultraviolet light that photos don't emit.Weak photos not capturing things we cannot see!You can get (or at least you could, I assume they still make it) infrared film, it tends to make things look sort of white and ghostly.Wow. That's a thing. Imna start calling this bee film!
I believe no. Bees see ultraviolet light that photos don't emit.Weak photos not capturing things we cannot see!You can get (or at least you could, I assume they still make it) infrared film, it tends to make things look sort of white and ghostly.Wow. That's a thing. Imna start calling this bee film!
Weak photos not capturing things we cannot see!You can get (or at least you could, I assume they still make it) infrared film, it tends to make things look sort of white and ghostly.Wow. That's a thing. Imna start calling this bee film!
You can get (or at least you could, I assume they still make it) infrared film, it tends to make things look sort of white and ghostly.Wow. That's a thing. Imna start calling this bee film!
I believe no. Bees see ultraviolet light that photos don't emit.
Weak photos not capturing things we cannot see!
You can get (or at least you could, I assume they still make it) infrared film, it tends to make things look sort of white and ghostly.
Wow. That's a thing. Imna start calling this bee film!