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What Happened If You Fell into a Pool Of Electric Eels?

Ribbon Eel Kills You?

By Get Value DailyPublished 3 years ago 5 min read
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Electric Eel Fish Information

Commonly known as the 'eel,' ribbon eels (also called moray eels') have been around for over 500 million years. They're one of the oldest fish species and live in all parts of the globe, including shallow-water regions in many tropical and temperate climates. They don't usually live more than two or three meters below the water's surface, where they eat other live things. Their favorite food is plankton.

By Francisco Jesús Navarro Hernández on Unsplash

Ribbon Eels grows in the warmer waters of the Pacific Ocean. This species is particularly common in the Indo-Pacific region, including the Indian, Chinese and Japanese oceans. Ribbon Eels usually live around the edge of rocky reefs in the sea areas, but some can also be found deep under the ocean surface. Ribbon Eels has a very sensitive nervous system, so being exposed to electrical currents can cause them great harm. The Ribbon Eel is also known as the 'Morse Eel' because of their unique call. Because of their delicate nervous system, the Ribbon Eel is an ideal candidate for breeding.

Electric Eel fish are not as aggressive as Ribbon Eels, so they are usually easier to handle. However, they are not generally territorial and will normally live peacefully with other fish in a natural environment. Eels like a wide variety of foods, including meat, bloodworms, vegetables, and insects. They may also drink water, which is very nutritious. If they have any illness, such as a bacterial infection, it can be easily treated by adding the appropriate antibiotics to the water. Electric Eel fish are a great aquarium pet and should be kept in a group if possible. Although they can reproduce easily, they are not particularly aggressive towards other fish. However, well-established species can be a nuisance, especially if other fish in the tank is also aggressive towards the fish.

What Happened If You Fell into a Pool Of Electric Eels?

What will happen if you encountered one? Or how about a pool filled with them? How can a fish shock somebody?

What can its jolt do to your own body? And has something like this happened before?

If you're expecting to jump into a pool full of electric eels, you may not have an opportunity to get into the water. That is because if the eels see you standing outside the swimming pool, they may jump out and jolt you.

That's appropriate. When electric eels see a hazard, they're ready to leap up and zap you.

So you are going to need to be cautious before you jump into our pool. However, what happens if you managed to dive right in?

It is safe to say something like this would be incredibly dangerous. Although electric eels don't hunt humans and aren't something we ought to be afraid of in our daily lives, they will surely shock you if they believe you are a threat -- or something they could consume.

For the time being, let's go easy on you and give you a single electric eel in an ordinary size swimming pool. Whenever you enter the water, the fish will let out an electric discharge. It does this by using the 3 electrical organs within its body.

These organs include electrolytes, and the eel utilizes them to navigate and communicate and shock its prey.

This could affect you in several ways. If it had been a smaller electrical eel, its jolt would definitely sting and could provide you a few muscle spasms.

The eel would hope that you make some splashes, which would help the eel to find you. After that occurs, and also the eel places you, the eel will release another electric shock.

If the shock were to come out of a full-sized grownup, it could be equivalent to 600 volts of electricity. Now this jolt itself may not kill you, but it might result in some serious effects.

In the beginning, you are going to experience some loss of muscle control. That is because our muscles are stimulated by electricity.

If you get too much of it, you may shed some significant functions in the body. If this is not bad enough, you would also have some incredibly painful muscle contractions.

All this could let you pass out. And oh, remember that we are in a pool? If you have passed out, you'll drown, then it would take just 60 minutes for one to die. But if you did manage to get out before then, you might survive. Though with shocks such as these, you'd still experience the effects months, or even years, after.

They could include burns, scars, and much more muscle spasms. So that was just one electric eel, and it had been fairly deadly. However, what if we put 100 electrical eels in a pool?

Well, it would mean immediate death the moment you jumped in. That is because electrical eels don't play nicely with one another.

If you put only two together in a small aquarium, they would always be slapping one another and discharging electric shocks. If we decided to put 100 electric eels in an average-size swimming pool, the water could be filled with a constant onslaught of fish slaps and thousands of volts of power.

Yeah, fantastic luck leaping into this one! So jumping into a pool full of electric eels is practically an instant death sentence, but can the same be said about jumping into a pool full of sharks?

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