Don’t mess with an electric eel. Turns out these animals are neural puppetmasters, using electricity as the strings to manipulate their prey. While the serpentine creatures regularly use their zapping ...
The electric eel creates its own electricity, sure, but Vanderbilt University professor Ken Catania tells NPR's Scott Simon what's shocking is how the eel uses it to remotely control prey. Electric ...
Talk about a shock—electric eels use their built-in "taser" to stun prey from a distance, a new study reveals. Strong, fast pulses delivered remotely by the fish Electrophorus electricus cause its ...
IT’S a stunning discovery: Electric eels don’t just “zap” their prey. They use their powers to remote-control them too. A new study published in the journal Science reveals the eels can ‘remote ...
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