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Sensors, meanwhile, are often projecting from or on a projecting part of the body in order to pick up as many electric signals as it can outside the body and are normally found near the head, where they can easily send messages to the brain about what's in front of it, the same as other specialized environment sensors like your eyes and nose. Both of these correlate the most strongly to the Shockjaw's tendrils.) Here's the thing electric organs tend to be internal (and rarely near the head.though electric rays beg to differ on that) because they use the body's own natural ions to produce a polarity that creates a current. (In fact, for dolphins, these electroreceptors are literally whiskers, and in the elphantnose, it's an elongated chin. But many organisms, from elephantnose fish to sharks to dolphins to platypuses to echidnas, have specialized electric sensors called electroreceptors on their face. But no organism has this, regardless of whether they are weakly electric or strongly electric. You see, I tried to look for other organisms with electric organs that stick out of the face, much like the Shockjaw's tendrils. That's pretty much the whole theory, but I did discover something very strange about the Shockjaw's design that I thought was intereting.
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