Why most insects have more than 2 eyes but mostly mammals have only 2 eyes?

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Why most insects have more than 2 eyes but mostly mammals have only 2 eyes?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Hard for me to focus with just my two eyes but now if they give me the 10 eyes?!? I will be able to see to much and not focus and now I will fail math class!

Anonymous 0 Comments

Evolutionary advantage to their unique environments – multiple eyes allow for a wider field of view and helps them detect predators and prey.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I suspect it’s because you can position eyes to cover what you need as a species (prey have side-facing eyes for full field-of-view, predators front-facing for better binocular). And eyes are ridiculously expensive, evolutionarily speaking. It’s not the eye itself, but a huge fraction of the brain ([this article](https://www.rochester.edu/pr/Review/V74N4/0402_brainscience.html) says over half the cortex) goes towards processing visual data, and brains are *very* expensive. The brain uses 20-25% of all the energy our body uses, so adding more eyes means you need to eat quite a bit more. It’s not a coincidence that eyes are the first thing to go in cave-dwelling species. That means ditching eyes when you don’t need them helps *a lot*.

I’m not sure how many eyes we’re counting for insects, but in compound eyes, each individual micro-eye is more like a single rod/cone in a vertebrate retina. Now, as to why spiders usually have 8 eyes…

Anonymous 0 Comments

Which mammals have more than 2 eyes?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Insects have two eyes. They are compound eyes which have a different structure to our eyes. Each facet on a compound eye is not a separate eye. It is a separate light sensor with its own lens.

Spiders have 8 eyes in general but they are not insects.

No mammal has more than two eyes.