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Friday 12 December 2025 09:07:40 GMT
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Deep in the murky rivers of the Amazon lives a creature that is, quite literally, a living battery. The electric eel can generate a jolt of electricity powerful enough to stun a horse or knock a grown human off their feet. The strongest known species (Electrophorus voltai, identified in 2019) can discharge up to around 860 VOLTS — the highest voltage of any animal on Earth. How does it work? Most of its long body — up to about 80% of it — is made of special electricity-generating cells called electrocytes, stacked like the cells in a battery. When the eel fires, they all discharge at once, releasing a massive electric burst. It uses a high-voltage shock to stun prey and defend itself, and weak low-voltage pulses to sense the world around it. A few things most people get wrong: ⚡ It's not actually an eel — it's a type of knifefish, more closely related to catfish and carp. ⚡ It's not blind — it has poor eyesight, so it
Deep in the murky rivers of the Amazon lives a creature that is, quite literally, a living battery. The electric eel can generate a jolt of electricity powerful enough to stun a horse or knock a grown human off their feet. The strongest known species (Electrophorus voltai, identified in 2019) can discharge up to around 860 VOLTS — the highest voltage of any animal on Earth. How does it work? Most of its long body — up to about 80% of it — is made of special electricity-generating cells called electrocytes, stacked like the cells in a battery. When the eel fires, they all discharge at once, releasing a massive electric burst. It uses a high-voltage shock to stun prey and defend itself, and weak low-voltage pulses to sense the world around it. A few things most people get wrong: ⚡ It's not actually an eel — it's a type of knifefish, more closely related to catfish and carp. ⚡ It's not blind — it has poor eyesight, so it "sees" using electric fields, like built-in radar, in the dark murky water. ⚡ It can LEAP out of the water and press its electric chin against a threat to deliver the shock directly — a behavior dismissed as a myth for 200 years until a scientist filmed and measured it in 2016. And here's the twist: this exact creature inspired the world's first battery. In 1800, Alessandro Volta built the "voltaic pile" — the first true battery — modeled on the eel's stacked electric cells. The word "volt" comes from his name. Nature mastered electricity long before we did. What's the most surprising natural ability you've ever heard of? 👇 #electriceel #animals #AnimalFacts #DidYouKnow #mindblown

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