Quirks and Quarks

Electric Eels "Tase" Their Prey

Eels deliver carefully modulated high voltage shocks that paralyze the muscles of the fish they hunt.
Stock photo of an electric eel. (Shutterstock)
Electric eels can generate a tremendous jolt - upwards of 600 volts and 1 ampere of current. But just how they use their power has not entirely been understood by scientists, until now. Dr. Ken Catania, a neurobiologist and professor of Biological Sciences at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, has shown, in a new series of experiments, that their strategy is the same as the Taser devices used by law-enforcement. The eels have a two-step hunting strategy.

They prowl the waters of their Amazonian home, and when they suspect prey may be nearby, they send out a quick electrical pulse that causes hidden fish to twitch and reveal their location. They then send out a more powerful and sustained blast which simultaneously activates all of the motor neurons in the fish, causing a total body muscular contraction. The paralyzed fish is then easy prey.


Related Links

- Paper in Science
- Vanderbilt University release
- Not Exactly Rocket Science blog
- National Geographic story

Video from Vanderbilt University