How do fish make electricity Eleanor Nelsen

In 1800, the explorer
Alexander von Humboldt

witnessed a swarm of electric eels
leap out of the water

to defend themselves
against oncoming horses.

Most people thought the story
so unusual that Humboldt made it up.

But fish using electricity is more common
than you might think;

and yes, electric eels are a type of fish.

Underwater, where light is scarce,

electrical signals offer ways
to communicate,

navigate,

and find—plus, in rare cases, stun—prey.

Nearly 350 species of fish
have specialized anatomical structures

that generate
and detect electrical signals.

These fish are divided into two groups,

depending on how much
electricity they produce.

Scientists call the first group
the weakly electric fish.

Structures near their tails
called electric organs

produce up to a volt of electricity,
about two-thirds as much as a AA battery.

How does this work?

The fish’s brain sends a signal through
its nervous system to the electric organ,

which is filled with stacks of hundreds

or thousands of disc-shaped
cells called electrocytes.

Normally, electrocytes pump out sodium
and potassium ions

to maintain a positive charge outside
and negative charge inside.

But when the nerve signal arrives
at the electrocyte,

it prompts the ion gates to open.

Positively charged ions flow back in.

Now, one face of the electrocyte
is negatively charged outside

and positively charged inside.

But the far side
has the opposite charge pattern.

These alternating charges
can drive a current,

turning the electrocyte
into a biological battery.

The key to these fish’s powers
is that nerve signals are coordinated

to arrive at each cell
at exactly the same time.

That makes the stacks of electrocytes
act like thousands of batteries in series.

The tiny charges from each one
add up to an electrical field

that can travel several meters.

Cells called electroreceptors
buried in the skin

allow the fish to constantly sense
this field

and the changes to it caused
by the surroundings or other fish.

The Peter’s elephantnose fish,
for example,

has an elongated chin
called a schnauzenorgan

that’s riddled in electroreceptors.

That allows it to intercept signals
from other fish,

judge distances,

detect the shape and size
of nearby objects,

and even determine whether
a buried insect is dead or alive.

But the elephantnose
and other weakly electric fish

don’t produce enough electricity
to attack their prey.

That ability belongs
to the strongly electric fish,

of which there are only
a handful of species.

The most powerful strongly electric
fish is the electric knife fish,

more commonly known as the electric eel.

Three electric organs span
almost its entire two-meter body.

Like the weakly electric fish,

the electric eel uses its signals
to navigate and communicate,

but it reserves its strongest
electric discharges for hunting

using a two-phased attack that susses out
and then incapacitates its prey.

First, it emits two
or three strong pulses,

as much as 600 volts.

These stimulate the prey’s muscles,
sending it into spasms

and generating waves
that reveal its hiding place.

Then, a volley of fast,
high-voltage discharges

causes even more intense
muscle contractions.

The electric eel can also curl up
so that the electric fields

generated at each end
of the electric organ overlap.

The electrical storm eventually
exhausts and immobilizes the prey,

and the electric eel
can swallow its meal alive.

The other two strongly electric fish
are the electric catfish,

which can unleash 350 volts

with an electric organ
that occupies most of its torso,

and the electric ray, with kidney-shaped
electric organs on either side of its head

that produce as much as 220 volts.

There is one mystery in the world
of electric fish:

why don’t they electrocute themselves?

It may be that the size
of strongly electric fish

allows them to withstand their own shocks,

or that the current passes out
of their bodies too quickly.

Some scientists think that special
proteins may shield the electric organs,

but the truth is, this is one mystery
science still hasn’t illuminated.

1800 年,探险家
亚历山大·冯·洪堡 (Alexander von Humboldt)

目睹了一群电鳗
从水中跃出,


抵御迎面而来的马匹。

大多数人认为这个故事
很不寻常,所以洪堡编造了这个故事。

但是用电的鱼
比你想象的更普遍。

是的,电鳗是一种鱼。

在光线稀少的水下,

电信号提供
了交流、

导航

和寻找——在极少数情况下还可以击晕——猎物的方式。

近 350 种鱼类
具有专门的解剖结构

,可以产生
和检测电信号。

这些鱼

根据
它们产生的电力分为两组。

科学家称第一组
为弱电鱼。

它们尾巴附近的结构
称为电子器官,可

产生高达一伏的电力,
约为 AA 电池的三分之二。

这是如何运作的?

鱼的大脑通过
其神经系统向电器官发送信号,该器官

充满成百上千个

称为电细胞的圆盘状细胞。

正常情况下,细胞会泵出钠
离子和钾离子

以维持外部正电荷
和内部负电荷。

但是当神经信号到达电细胞时

它会促使离子门打开。

带正电的离子流回。

现在,细胞的一面在
外面带负电,在

里面带正电。

但远端
具有相反的电荷模式。

这些交变电荷
可以驱动电流,


电池变成生物电池。

这些鱼的力量的关键
在于神经信号被协调

以完全相同的时间到达每个细胞。

这使得
电池堆就像数千个串联的电池一样。

每个电荷的微小电荷
加起来形成

一个可以传播几米的电场。 埋在皮肤中的

称为电感受器的细胞

使鱼能够不断地感知
这个场

以及
由周围环境或其他鱼引起的变化。

例如,彼得的象鼻鱼

有一个细长的下巴,
叫做雪纳森器官

,里面布满了电感受器。

这使它能够拦截
来自其他鱼类的信号,

判断距离,

检测
附近物体的形状和大小,

甚至
确定埋藏的昆虫是死是活。

但是象鼻
鱼和其他弱电鱼

不能产生足够的电力
来攻击它们的猎物。

这种能力
属于强电鱼,

种类屈指可数。

最强的强电
鱼是电刀鱼

,俗称电鳗。

三个电子器官
几乎覆盖了它两米长的身体。

像弱电鱼一样

,电鳗使用它的信号
来导航和交流,

但它使用两阶段攻击保留其最强的
放电来狩猎

,然后使猎物失去能力。

首先,它会发出两
到三个

高达 600 伏的强脉冲。

这些刺激猎物的肌肉,
使其痉挛


产生揭示其藏身之处的波浪。

然后,一连串快速
的高压放电

会导致更强烈的
肌肉收缩。

电鳗也可以卷起来,
使

电器官两端产生的电场重叠。

电风暴最终
使猎物筋疲力尽,无法动弹

,电鳗
可以活着吞下它的食物。

另外两种强电鱼
是电鲶鱼,

它可以释放出 350 伏的电压


它的大部分躯干都有一个电器官,

还有一种电鳐,
它的头部两侧有肾形的电器官,

可以产生高达 220 伏的电压。 伏特。 电鱼

的世界里有一个谜

它们为什么不电死自己?

可能
是强电鱼的体型

让它们能够承受自己的电击,

或者电流
过快地流出它们的身体。

一些科学家认为特殊的
蛋白质可以保护电子器官,

但事实是,这是一门
尚未阐明的神秘科学。