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How do fish make electricity?
Content Provider | TED Ed |
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Author | Nelsen, Eleanor |
Illustrator | Barrera, Vidal Sandoval, Eduardo |
Description | Vanderbilt professor and electric-eel expert Ken Catania was curious to see if he could confirm von Humboldt’s account of the leaping eels, so he set out to replicate the experiment. He determined that electric eels would, in fact, throw themselves out of the water to attack a perceived threat, suggesting that Humboldt’s story was likely true. Catania even got video footage of an eel leaping at a fake human arm. You can also read more on Catania’s work demonstrating that electric eels “remote-control” their prey. Electrocytes are modified muscle. Scientists at the University of Wisconsin have studied the genetics behind the transition from muscle cells to electricity-producing cells, and discovered that this remarkable ability evolved six different times. Centuries before the invention of anesthesia or modern painkillers, physicians who happened to live near the habitats of strongly electric fish employed their shocks as analgesia. The Romans used the electric torpedo ray to treat headaches and gout, and the Greeks used them during childbirth (in fact, the English word “narcotic” is derived from narke, the Greek word for these rays). |
Language | English |
Access Restriction | Open |
Subject Keyword | Science Technology Life Sciences Environmental Science Physical Science |
Content Type | Video Animation |
Time Required | PT5M15S |
Education Level | Class VII Class VIII Class IX Class X |
Pedagogy | Lecture cum Demonstration |
Resource Type | Video Lecture |
Subject | Environmental Science |