yes, they have eyes, there vision is different than ours, but they see. They also use antenae and hearing as part of their sight.
2007-03-16 00:45:05
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answer #1
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answered by Need Answers 3
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Can Ants See
2016-09-28 11:51:51
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answer #2
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answered by abid 4
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Some can and some can't. There are some
kinds of ants which have no eyes. Most of them
do have eyes, though they may be such simple
ones that they only detect the presence or
absence of light and possibly its color, but do
not form an image.
Ants that have compound eyes can form an image, but it is a much grainier one than we
see, like a poor newspaper photograph. The
winged male and female ants have larger and
more acute eyes than the workers. The workers of a few species of ants have large
compound eyes, but most do not.
2007-03-19 06:48:41
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Ant eyes are compound eyes, similar to fly eyes: they have many smaller eyes attached together which enables them to see movement very well. Most ants have poor to mediocre eyesight; some are blind altogether. A few have exceptional vision though, such as Australia's bulldog ant. Also attached to the head of an ant are two feelers. The feelers are special smelling organs that help ants communicate. Ants release pheromones (chemicals that have different smells) to communicate with each other and the feelers pick these smells as signals.
2007-03-16 00:47:06
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answer #4
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answered by bwlobo 7
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of course
2007-03-16 00:40:40
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answer #5
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answered by j 4
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they dont have any kinds of EYES
2016-12-02 06:28:42
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answer #6
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answered by Amro 1
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nope! They've got antennas which act as thier eyes.!
2007-03-16 00:39:30
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answer #7
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answered by Romeo (The Original) 2
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Of course,NO!
2007-03-16 00:49:49
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answer #8
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answered by Kathleen M. 1
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no
2007-03-16 00:40:29
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answer #9
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answered by booge 6
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