Can rats see UV light?
Christopher Ramos
Published May 18, 2026
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Similarly, it is asked, can rats see light?
Rats see in color. They have two types of color cones in the retina; one for detecting blue ultraviolet light and one for detecting shades of green.
Beside above, can mice see UV light? Gerald H. Jacobs and his colleagues at the University of California in Santa Barbara have discovered that house mice, gerbils, gophers and rats have photoreceptors more sensitive to ultraviolet light than to any other light on the spectrum. Why the rodents can see in the ultraviolet remains mysterious.
Also to know is, what light can rats not see?
Yes, but not well. They lack long wavelength cones that allow them to see red with their color vision, but their rods do pick up the presence of red wavelengths. Essentially, they see it in black and white.
Do rats like bright light?
The area where they¿re housed to not be too bright during the day, out of direct sunlight, and dark at night. Rats are naturally most active at night. Rats are very sensitive to light; bright light can cause stress and harm their eyes ¿ particularly albino strains (red-eyed white rats).
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