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6 answers

Lightning never strikes the sea or for that matter any water body. For lightning to strike something, charge must be localised on it. This is not possible for water.

2006-08-16 04:55:18 · answer #1 · answered by ag_iitkgp 7 · 0 1

basically as people in many cases stay to tell the story if lightning hits approximately a hundred feet. away, so too will fish and different marine existence. That via fact the two earth and water are dense and the electrical powered cost dissipates in a radial way. yet those fish on the fringe of a strike are certainly killed. I stay in Florida, and the seashores are strewn with a good number of ineffective fish after a lighning hurricane, although maximum are eaten by utilising predators till now they have a wager to bathe ashore. section observe: as quickly as there became a water spout that got here in off the sea and moved ashore for greater or less 15 seconds. Moments later, a motor vehicle park and the sea coast had a pair of dozen flopping fishes stresn approximately - very cool! :)

2016-11-04 22:45:27 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes, lightening does strikes the oceans.
but the fish hardly get electrocuted. the high current passes directly to the earth below it.
in other ways ocean acts a shield for the fish against the lightening.
therefore it is always adviced to sit inside a car than a tree during lightening as current donot flow inside a container, oceans.

2006-08-16 04:58:43 · answer #3 · answered by radpaikar 2 · 0 0

Lightning most definitely strikes the oceans, but not nearly as frequently as it does land. The reason is that in order to get enough electrical potential between particles of water and the ground/water, you need rapidly rising air due to warm temperatures on the ground and you need cold air aloft. On the surface of the ocean, you don't get such drastic temperature differences. As far as fish effects go, fish researchers as well as State and Federal wildlife agencies have used electro-fishing techniques to stun and or kill fish for years. Fish don't dig electricity. So if there happened to be a fish near a lightning strike inthe ocean, my guess is that it would bypass the sushi step and go directly to well done.

2006-08-16 08:47:51 · answer #4 · answered by thuren2001 2 · 0 0

I dont know but if one were to say no then why are you more likely to get struck if you are in the pool or lake? Is that not a body of water too? Good question I hope that someone who actually knows answers!

2006-08-16 05:17:44 · answer #5 · answered by Mommy2Be 3 · 0 0

I don't think it would.

And since most animals have that "5th sense" with weather and storms and whatever, the fish'll probably just swim to some other place or deeper in the body of water.

2006-08-16 04:53:46 · answer #6 · answered by Jason 4 · 0 0

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