WHY DO SOME FISH HAVE BOTH EYES ON THE SAME SIDE?

While many fish swim in shoals, eating plankton as they flash through the water, others spend most of their time on the ocean bed. As the fish evolved, their eyes developed on the same side, so that both can see into the water above.

These quick-change artists have eyes on top of their heads, yet marvelously mimic the surfaces they sit on. This prompted Clayton Louis Ferrara to ask Weird Animal. Flatfish have eyes on the top of their heads, how do they see what’s going on the ocean floor?”

Flatfish, found all over the world, range from the angler fin whiff which is about three inches (eight centimeters) to the Pacific halibut, which can get up to around nine feet (three meters) long. This fish group includes species familiar to seafood lovers—not only halibut, but flounder, sole, and turbot.

All flatfish have eyes on the end of stalks, so they pop out of the head “kind of like the eyes we saw in cartoons—ba-boing!” 

Flatfish eyes can also move independently, widening their field of vision. Once flatfish eyes get the lay of the land, they message the brain, which in turn sends signals back to the skin. This organ contains color-changing cells such as melanophores, which either expand or contract according to the background the fish is trying to match.

For instance, expanding their cells would make their color darker. All this neurological relaying is “a pretty sophisticated thing to do,” Burgess says—not to mention it takes flatfish between two and eight minutes to blend in.

Even more impressive than how the eyes work is how they get on top of the head in the first place. Flatfishes don’t start out flat. They start out looking like regular fish, kind of diamond shaped, and “as larvae, the eyes are in regular position on each side,” As they develop “the eye begins to migrate, moving over the top of the head, eventually settling on one side or the other”. This also requires the bones in their heads to move.

The flatfish’s bones are pretty pliable at this point, like the soft spot on an infant’s skull, so “as the eye moves, the bones in the head warp in that direction,” An additional bone, found only in flatfish, develops right under the migrating eye, giving them that goofy asymmetrical look.