Eels use electricity to remote control prey movements
New Scientist,
Someone is in for a shock (Image: Kenneth Catania) By The ability of electric eels to shock their prey with a 600-volt blast is…
Someone is in for a shock (Image: Kenneth Catania) By The ability of electric eels to shock their prey with a 600-volt blast is…
Benjamin Franklin may or may not have flown a kite through lightning. But British scientist Michael Faraday, a 19th-century…
Benjamin Franklin may or may not have flown a kite through lightning. But British scientist Michael Faraday, a 19th-century…
Biologist Kenneth Catania tests firsthand the circuit that forms when an eel leaps to electrify a threat.