Electric Eel vs Cornuda gigante
Electrophorus electricus comparado con Sphyrna mokarran
Taxonomy & Classification
| Atributo | Electric Eel | Cornuda gigante |
|---|---|---|
| Nombre Científico | Electrophorus electricus | Sphyrna mokarran |
| Orden | Gymnotiformes | Carcharhiniformes |
| Familia | Gymnotidae | Sphyrnidae |
| Conservation Status | Least Concern | Critically Endangered |
Physical Traits
| Atributo | Electric Eel | Cornuda gigante |
|---|---|---|
| Longitud Máxima | 250,0 cm | 610,0 cm |
| Peso Máximo | 20,0 kg | 580,0 kg |
| Color | Dark olive-gray to grayish-brown cylinder-shaped body with a pale yellowish-orange throat and chin; back uniformly dark; scaleless skin has a smooth appearance; long ribbon-like anal fin is pinkish. | Brownish-gray to olive-gray dorsal surface with a clean countershaded white belly; no distinct patterning; first dorsal fin is tall and strongly falcate; pelvic fin tips dusky. |
Habitat & Environment
| Atributo | Electric Eel | Cornuda gigante |
|---|---|---|
| Tipo de Agua | Freshwater | Saltwater |
| Rango de Profundidad | — | 1-300m |
| Distribución Geográfica | Native to the Orinoco and Amazon river basins in Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and Brazil. Inhabits murky, oxygen-depleted floodplain pools, swamps, and slow-moving streams in lowland … | Circumtropical in warm coastal and offshore waters of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. Concentrates around coral reefs, continental shelf edges, and deep-water drop-offs; population … |
| Hábitat | Estuaries | Neritic |
Cuisine & Edibility
Electric Eel
Not consumed — an ornamental and scientific novelty species kept in specialized aquarium exhibits; edible in principle but extremely dangerous to handle due to powerful electric discharge.
Cornuda gigante
Critically Endangered — consumption strongly discouraged. Fins are historically traded but the species faces severe population decline; eating this fish is ecologically irresponsible.
Species Overview
Electric Eel
Despite its name, the electric eel is not a true eel but a knifefish. It can generate electrical discharges of up to 860 volts to stun prey and defend itself. About 80% of its body is dedicated to three electric organs.
Cornuda gigante
The great hammerhead is the largest of the nine hammerhead shark species. Its distinctive cephalofoil (hammer-shaped head) houses an array of electroreceptors that allow it to detect stingrays buried beneath the sand.
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