Advertisement

natureNature

Fact Check: Do Reindeers' Eyes Really Change Color In Winter?

author

Rachael Funnell

author

Rachael Funnell

Digital Content Producer

Rachael is a writer and digital content producer at IFLScience with a Zoology degree from the University of Southampton, UK, and a nose for novelty animal stories.

Digital Content Producer

clockPublished
reindeer eyes change color

Reindeer are in fact the only mammal whose eyes change color with the season. Image credit: LETOM/Shutterstock.com 

You might have seen a cool post on Reddit that appears to show the dramatic transformation of reindeer eyes from golden brown in the summer to White Walker blue in the winter. Unfortunately, this photo is fake as the vibrant blue eye is actually an edited version of a real image on Alamy. However, there is some truth to the winter wonderland makeover.

Reindeer are the only animals known to change eye color in the winter, but the effect isn’t so outwardly obvious. Once you see what’s going on inside the eye, however, it really is quite a spectacular change. One that was discovered when neuroscientist Glen Jeffery found himself — without really asking for it — in possession of a big ol’ bag of reindeer eyes.

Advertisement

In fairness, studying animal vision at the University College London, UK, meant Jeffery had good reason to end up with the creepy accessory. Colleagues were eager to understand how reindeer tolerated the extreme change in light conditions annually experienced, so turned to Jeffery with a bag-load of googlies.

What felt like an imposition would turn out to be quite the find, however, as reindeer eyes harvested from animals killed in the summer and others killed in the winter were found to contain more wonder than a Kinder Surprise.

“I thought it was a dumb idea,” Jeffery, who figured the adaptation lay in the animals’ neurological function rather than their physical eyes, told National Geographic. “I opened them up and went: Jesus Christ! Hang on. They’re a different colour.”

reindeer eyes changecolor in winter glen jeffrey
Eyes from animals that died in summer and winter. Image courtesy of Glen Jeffery

The transformation takes place in the tapetum lucidum or “cat’s eye” which sits behind the retina. It acts a bit like a mirror bouncing light that comes through the retina back onto it so that the eye basically gets two shots at detecting photons and making sense of the environment.

Advertisement

Most mammals have golden cat’s eyes, which is true too of reindeers in the summer but come winter they turn blue. Why? During the long winter reindeers’ eyes are permanently dilated to try and see as much as possible in the dark conditions of the Arctic circle where some parts get little sunlight for up to six months of the year. This increases pressure in the eye, changing how tightly packed the collagen is in the tapetum lucidum layer.

As they bunch together under the eye’s increasing pressure, it changes how they reflect light moving from yellow wavelengths to blue. And, hey presto, you have yourself a blue cat’s eye. Jeffery and colleagues made the discovery back in 2013, but accounts from the time would indicate the results left a lasting impression.

"I opened the eyes up on my lab bench and almost fell off my chair," Jeffery told Live Science. "The differences were so dramatic, and I knew no one had ever seen anything like that before… We have some evidence that the blue reflection in winter amplifies ultraviolet light, while in summer it suppresses it.”

While the color-shifting eyes of reindeer might not turn them White Walker blue to the human eye, it does give these animals an advantage in the dark. Our advice? Winter is coming, stay on Rudolf’s good side.

Advertisement

Speaking of which, did you know there are actually five adaptations that make reindeer the perfect animal for pulling Santa's sled? (And five scientific arguments for Santa completing the journey)


natureNature
  • tag
  • Christmas