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Sea Lice #26339
04/05/2014 01:28 PM
04/05/2014 01:28 PM
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 135
Wells Beach, Maine
Biminirose Offline OP
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Biminirose  Offline OP
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Wells Beach, Maine
Heading to Bimini next month and am wondering if the sea lice are still around. NAsty little buggers! Thanks!

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Re: Sea Lice [Re: Biminirose] #26340
04/05/2014 05:08 PM
04/05/2014 05:08 PM
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 5,884
St. Thomas, USVI
Nutmeg Offline
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Nutmeg  Offline
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St. Thomas, USVI
If copepods disappear from the marine ecosystem, it will be a bad day. <img src="http://www.traveltalkonline.com/forums/images/graemlins/cry.gif" alt="" /> Often some creatures are abundant because of weather conditions, food resources, etc. I don't know about Bimini, but these things are frequently seasonal.


[color:"red"]NUTMEG[/color]
Today is the tomorrow you talked about yesterday.
Re: Sea Lice [Re: Nutmeg] #26341
04/05/2014 07:26 PM
04/05/2014 07:26 PM
Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 3,003
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sail445 Offline
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sail445  Offline
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What's your or what is the definition of Sea Lice?

Re: Sea Lice [Re: sail445] #26342
04/06/2014 09:38 AM
04/06/2014 09:38 AM
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 5,884
St. Thomas, USVI
Nutmeg Offline
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Nutmeg  Offline
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St. Thomas, USVI
Are you asking me? sea lice


[color:"red"]NUTMEG[/color]
Today is the tomorrow you talked about yesterday.
Re: Sea Lice [Re: Nutmeg] #26343
04/06/2014 10:12 AM
04/06/2014 10:12 AM
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 135
Wells Beach, Maine
Biminirose Offline OP
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Biminirose  Offline OP
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Wells Beach, Maine

sea lice are the larva from jelly fish and they cause a terrible rash similar to sever poision ivy.

Re: Sea Lice #26344
04/06/2014 10:59 AM
04/06/2014 10:59 AM
Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 3,003
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sail445 Offline
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sail445  Offline
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Foul!! <img src="http://www.traveltalkonline.com/forums/images/graemlins/Grin.gif" alt="" />

Re: Sea Lice [Re: Biminirose] #26345
04/06/2014 03:38 PM
04/06/2014 03:38 PM
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 5,884
St. Thomas, USVI
Nutmeg Offline
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Nutmeg  Offline
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St. Thomas, USVI
Well, the problem with common names is that people call different creatures the same name. You are talking about cnidarians, which are in a whole different phylum from that of copepods. Cnidaria do have stinging potential, that is for sure. I still think that they can be seasonal. I have never heard of "sea lice" in the VI, and from the Wikipedia articles, I see why.


[color:"red"]NUTMEG[/color]
Today is the tomorrow you talked about yesterday.
Sea Lice #26346
04/06/2014 04:03 PM
04/06/2014 04:03 PM
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sail445 Offline
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I know during Jellyfish season a lot of the Jellyfish are chopped to pieces by the ferry and pleasure boat props and the small pieces of the stinging tentacles are free to flow with the currents and sometimes wind up in the waters of the beaches.

Re: Sea Lice [Re: sail445] #26347
04/10/2014 08:17 AM
04/10/2014 08:17 AM
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 475
PDC, Mexico
bugambilias Offline
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bugambilias  Offline
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PDC, Mexico
From DermNet:

Sea bather's eruption is a rash that affects areas of the skin covered by a bathing suit, rather than exposed areas, after swimming in the sea. It is caused by stings from the stinging cells (also called nematocysts) of the larval forms of certain sea anemones and thimble jellyfishes. Sea thimbles are small tropical jellyfish that, even as adults, get no larger than about a centimetre in size. Most cases of sea bather's eruption occur during the summer as it seems to be dependant on water temperature. It affects swimmers, snorkelers, or divers soon after getting out of the water.

Sea bather's eruption has been called sea lice by some. Sea lice is actually due to immature larval forms of parasitic flatworms (schistosomes), penetrating the skin.


So, The way to prevent stings... Go skinny dipping! <img src="http://www.traveltalkonline.com/forums/images/graemlins/Wink.gif" alt="" />

Re: Sea Lice #26348
04/11/2014 02:41 PM
04/11/2014 02:41 PM
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sail445 Offline
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sail445  Offline
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These Sea lice must somehow be related to the Land lice neither can be drowned. <img src="http://www.traveltalkonline.com/forums/images/graemlins/Grin.gif" alt="" />


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