Why can sharks sense electricity?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Finding hidden prey
Powering their muscles — Wrong. Sharks don't use external electricity for muscle power—they generate their own energy internally through metabolism like all animals.
Detecting water temperature — Wrong. Temperature sensing uses different receptors. Electroreception specifically detects electrical fields from living organisms' muscle and nerve activity.
Finding hidden prey ✓ — Correct! Sharks have ampullae of Lorenzini—special gel-filled pores on their snouts that detect tiny electrical fields (as weak as 1 billionth of a volt!) from muscle contractions and heartbeats. This lets them find prey buried in sand or murky water. It's like having a sixth sense!
More Marine Life questions
- Platypuses and electroreceptive dolphins are passive electroreceptors. What are they reading?
- Platypus bills and some dolphin whisker pits both sense weak electric fields. What pattern is this?
- A nesting sea turtle looks like it is crying. What is the useful job?
- Which organism makes the most of Earth's oxygen?
- Why do sea anemones wave tentacles?
- Why do swordfish have long bills?
