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Of Sharks and Electrics...

Ash_Junior

Irredeemable Nerd
from Wikipedia:

Ampullae of Lorenzini
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The ampullae of Lorenzini are special sensing organs, forming a network of jelly-filled canals found on elasmobranchs (sharks and rays) and Chimaera. Each ampulla consists of a jelly-filled canal opening to the surface by a pore in the skin and ending blindly in a cluster of small pockets full of electroreceptor cells. The ampullae are mostly clustered into groups inside the body, each cluster having ampullae connecting with different parts of the skin, but preserving a left-right symmetry. The canal lengths vary from animal to animal, but the electroreceptor pores distribution is approximately species-specific. The ampullae pores are plainly visible as dark spots in the skin. They provide sharks and rays with a sixth sense capable of detecting electro-magnetic fields as well as temperature gradients.
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Electro-magnetic field sensing ability

The ampullae detects electric fields in the water, or more precisely the difference between the voltage at the skin pore and the voltage at the base of the electroreceptor cells. A positive pore stimulus would decrease the rate of nerve activity coming from the electroreceptor cells and a negative pore stimulus would increase the rate of nerve activity coming from the electroreceptor cells.

Sharks may be more sensitive to electric fields than any other animal, with a threshold of sensitivity as low as 5nV/cm. That is 5/1,000,000,000 of a volt measured in a centimeter-long ampulla. Since all living creatures produce an electrical field in muscle contractions, it is easy to imagine the shark may pick up weak electrical stimuli from the muscle contractions of animals, particularly prey, on the other hand, the electrochemical fields generated by paralyzed prey where sufficient to elicit a feeding attack from sharks and rays in experimental tanks, therefore muscle contractions are not necessary to attract the animals. Shark and rays can locate prey buried in the sand, or DC electric dipoles simulating the main feature of the electric field of a prey buried in the sand.

The electric fields produced by oceanic currents moving in the magnetic field of the earth are of the same order of magnitude as the electric fields that sharks and rays are capable to sense. Therefore, sharks and rays may orient to the electric fields of oceanic currents, and use other sources of electric fields in the ocean for local orientation. Additionally, the electric field they induce in their bodies when swimming in the magnetic field of the earth may give them electric clues about their magnetic heading.
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Temperature sensing ability

Early in the 20th century the purpose of the ampullae was not clearly understood and electrophysiological experiments suggest a sensibility to temperature, mechanical pressure and maybe salinity. It was not until 1960 that the ampullae was clearly identified as a receptor organ specialized in sensing electric fields. The ampullae may also allow the shark to detect changes in water temperature. Each ampulla is a bundle of sensory cells containing multiple nerve fibers. These fibers are enclosed in a gel-filled tubule which has a direct opening to the surface through a pore. The gel is a glyco-protein based substance with the same resistivity of seawater, and it has electrical properties similar to a semiconductor, allowing it to essentially transduce temperature changes into an electrical signal that the shark may use to detect temperature gradients.
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Electronic Shark Repellent

Dr. Graeme Charter and Norman Starkey developed the “POD” (or Protective Oceanic Device), which is the first successful electronic shark repellent for scuba divers. By producing an electromagnetic field, the POD irritates the Ampullae of Lorenzini of a great white shark. Shark nets, which traditionally protected divers, can harm or kill the shark, but these more primitive deterrents may soon be out of date.

I thought that that was REALLY sweet. almost immediately, I began to wonder how it could work for Pokemon.

Again, almost immediately, the Electric type pops out. Shark Pokemon would be able to detect Electric types a lot easier. Thus, Chinchou/Lanturns would be the prey of choice (in theory, anyway) of Sharpedo (and the other shark Pokemon I'm planning on making).

anyone wanna comment on this?

I thought it was pretty sweet because it's almost a real-world equivalent of my Carentamous Assembly (which allows Pokemon to be as strong as they are. if it's ever destroyed, they're REALLY weak)
 

Yami Ryu

Well-Known Member
*wonders about the quote in the sig :/*

Anyways the only flaw with this finding of yours is the difference between the magnetic field/energy people/living things give off and that of Chinchou/Lanturn ... is Lanturn and Chinchou are basically living batteries and Sharpedo are what, Water/Dark. And seeing as the Chin' line come with Volt Absorb, and being part electric anyways. Shocking the hell out of their predators won't hurt them.

I mean Sharks would be able to sense Electric eels. Would they want to eat them? No :/ I mean Electric eels have the ability to produce enough charge to kill you. The only reason they don't is if they killed you, they would have to deal with another idiot coming along all OOH WHAT IS THI- *Bzzzzzzzzzzzzt*. Over and over.

Easier sensing doesn't mean easier prey. Unless your shark types include a half electric/ground/grass/whatever pokemon, or something that negates the power of electricity. Maybe you should look at what irl sharks prey upon. Seels, turtles, even jellyfish. Though some seem to like eating car liscence plates...

Good idea to put this on Shark Pokemon... bad idea to assume that they'd target deep see fish such as Lanturn and Chinchou. Which are electric types. And electricity fries water. Maybe weak Chinchou, or weak Lanturn, but still. From what the anime shows Chinchou and Lanturn swim in groups...

Would you want to mess with like 25 electric fish, ticked off at you?
 

Ash_Junior

Irredeemable Nerd
true, but I don't use the anime, but you make some good points.

I was going on the assumption that Sharks would have a higher resistance to electric attacks. I don't know...

but still, it's an interesting concept, isn't it?

sharks would be a very important part of any water excursion, since that would letyou avoid or find Pokemon to battle (or not).

*shrugs*

I thought it was interesting.

btw, thank you VERY much for poking holes in my theory, so I can try to patch 'em up again, instead of going "OMG OMG OMG!!!!! THAT R0XX0R$!!!!!!" or whatever.

:D

poke holes. poke poke poke it.
 

Yami Ryu

Well-Known Member
Well critics are supposed to poke holes :p

Anyways I don't think sharks would have a higher resistance to electricity, but, there are some species that well, if made into pokemon could take down electric using fish, such as the, um what was it. Wobegon? Or Carpet shark. Whatever it was, it looks like it'd be Grass/Water.

Hm..

sharks would be a very important part of any water excursion, since that would letyou avoid or find Pokemon to battle (or not).

Or find things in distress? This would be good with lifeguards and etc. Or if a pokemon you were fighting tried to escape, if it was in the water. If you had a shark pokemon it'd be able to find it for you, more than likely.
 

icemew

Banned
Well...

I'd think Sharpedo would use that ability to avoid electric types, which would be useful in its own way. Also...if their ability is as sensitive as real-world sharks, maybe something that was actually an electric type and emitting a way stronger charge would being sorta blinding, so they couldn't pick up other non-electric types in the area who have a much weaker electric field.
 

Banov

Of the Kecleon
The actual point of sharks having that ability to to migrate... I doubt that ability can really be harnessed for much in a fanfiction universe. It sounds like it should, though...
 
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