Newly discovered eel delivers the strongest electric jolt on record 
By Eva Frederick BR Source: Plants & Animals 9/10/2019
Eva Frederick
Scientists have long assumed there was only one species of electric eel. (After all, who needs more?) But when a team of researchers examined more than 100 electric eels from South America’s Amazon Basin, it found that there are actually three species—one of which delivers the strongest shock ever measured in a living animal.
 

To come up with a definitive family tree, researchers looked at 107 eels captured in Brazil, Suriname, French Guiana, and Guyana. They analyzed the eel DNA, examined their body and bone structures, and mapped where they were caught. The data revealed three genetically separate groups with distinct geographical ranges, the researchers report today in Nature Communications. Electrophorus electricus lives the farthest to the north, mostly in Guyana and Suriname; E. varii is spread along the lowland Amazon Basin, mostly in northern Brazil; and E. voltai’s range dips even farther south into Brazil.

Although the species are nearly impossible to distinguish by sight— they all have brown wrinkly skin and frowny mouths—the team was able to find subtle differences in skull shape and body structure. E. electricus and E. voltai, for example, have depressed skulls that may have evolved as an adaptation for finding food on rocky river bottoms, or for efficient swimming in fast-flowing currents.

 
Electric eel Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4926Man faces animal cruelty charges 'for abandoning pet fish'independent2019-04-04US
4927Deformed fish hatched in bitumen-rich water can grow out of some defects: studyCBC News2019-05-17CA
4928Fish with HUMAN teeth found by stunned mum on US beach – 'never seen anything like it'dailystar2019-05-17UK
4929Stoddard County angler state record for black buffalooutdoornewsdaily2019-05-16CA
4930Young Huntsville angler catches first state-record yellow perchFishing News2019-05-16CA
4931One Reply to “Long Mountain Lake, British Columbia”Fish'n Canada2019-05-17CA
4932Swing-jig walleyeoodmag2019-03-14CA
4933National Lifejacket Day – Is It Time for Change?Fish'n Canada2019-05-16CA
49347 Reasons Why Size Matters for Halibutnoaa2019-03-14CA
4935Ancient fish ponds in the Bolivian savanna supported human settlementPLOS2019-05-15BR
4936Walleye, sauger in danger of disappearing from Lake Winnipeg, says Manitoba Wildlife Federationglobalnews2018-10-29CA
4937Fishing changes coming to Lake Winnipeg to help restore fish populationglobalnews2019-05-07CA
4938The mysterious case of the Kamloops Lake monsterCBC News2019-05-13CA
4939'Like a bad dream': Parks Canada fights back against invasive species in KejiCBC News 2019-05-13CA
4940Paddlefish Snagging Harvest Season to Close May 11outdoornewsdaily2019-05-09US
4941Kenora based angler Jeff Gustafson joins BassmasterCBC News2019-02-02US
4942Ontario Extending its Partnership with Nipissing First Nation to Support Walleye RecoveryOntario's official news source2019-03-12CA
4943Redfish rebound in Gulf of St. Lawrence show no signs of slowdownCBC News2019-05-12CA
4944Lunar Activity Increases Fish CaughtCanadian Angling.com 2019-05-10CA
4945Slab crappie could be a new state recordoutdoornews2019-05-09US
4946Fishing husband, wife cited for being over the limit – to the tune of 250-plus crappiesoutdoornews2018-08-01US
4947Smallmouth bass sets new state recordoutdoornews2019-05-09US
4948Three locked-up bucks found dead in Ohiooutdoornews2010-12-14US
4949New 5-Year Report Shows 101.6 Million Americans Participated in Hunting, Fishing & Wildlife ActivitiesInterior_Press2019-05-09US
4950U.S. angler pays Ontario $400 fine for keeping 52lb lake troutCBC News2019-04-02CA

197 198 199 197 of [200 - pages.]