An average sized electric eel (Electrophorous electricus) can discharge 450 volts at about 1 ampere. Dicharges of 650 volts have been recorded.
About 400 volts to 650 volts. Depends on the size of them as well.
There are eels that can produce an electric shock. They are called electric eels.
The electric eel's adaptations is #1, the electric shock.
Electric eels have been known to shock themselves sometimes, so yes, electric eels do sometimes get electrified.
Electric eels have special insulating tissues in their bodies that prevent the electric shock they produce from affecting themselves. These tissues protect the eels from being harmed by their own electrical discharges.
Electric eels can shock any animal that gets near it, and its volts can produce 600 volts that are strong enough to kill a human.
Electric cuttlefish, eels, stingrays and Mongolian worm
They don't, although electric eels can give you an enormous electric shock.
Electric eels do glow. They also spark. An electric eel can give off quite a shock. The shock can be as high as 600 volts.
No, although both electric eels and catfish are ray-finned fishes, electric eels are the only members of the genus Electrophorus. There are electric catfish, but they are not closely related to electric eels and their electric shock only reaches an intensity of 35o volts versus the electric eels' intensity of 6oo volts.
The Amazon River is home to the most electric eels. These animals, actually fish and not eels, live throughout South America and can deliver a shock of as much as 600 volts.
yes and they will electric your brains om nom nom nom