I'll zoom out a little more:
Do you have an idea now?
How about if I zoom out even a little further?
Can you tell that this animal has two shells (or valves)? And that it's just starting to open up and to extend its tentacles outward?
Warning: If you haven't guessed yet, the next photo might give the answer away.
Yes! This is a scallop, specifically a juvenile Rock Scallop (Crassadoma gigantea). And those small black dots lining the margins of the shells are its eyes — lots of them!
If you look at a cross-section of a scallop's eye, you'll find a cornea, a lens, a double retina, and a concave mirror that reflects light back to the retinas. This illustration will help visualize those structures:
Modified from Speiser, D.I., E.R. Loew, and S. Johnsen. 2010. Spectral sensitivity of the concave mirror eyes of scallops: potential influences of habitat, self-screening and longitudinal chromatic abberation. J. Exp. Biol. 214: 422-431. [This figure shows the eye of a Sea Scallop, Placopecten magellanicus. The scale bar represents 0.1 mm.]
Some research has been done into scallop vision. It's thought that scallop eyes can probably detect large moving objects (such as predators), and possibly nearby habitat characteristics as well as food particles moving by in the water.
The next image shows the entire animal. It was only ~1 cm across.
This small scallop was the star of a recent music video produced by Eric during his Invertebrate Biology class. I can't help but sing the praises of this wonderful footage of a scallop in action!
This was fascinating and I loved the video.
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