
SYDNEY,
Australia — Australians tend to roll their eyes when the world obsesses
about this country’s dangerous animal kingdom, including its deadly snakes (the deadliest in the world), its tiny and toxic redback spiders, and of course the jellyfish that cause heart attacks.
But
on Monday, even the most jaded Aussies found themselves gawking over
and swearing about the mysterious creatures that chewed up a Melbourne
teenager’s legs.
Graphic photos of his ankles spread across social media.
All
that the teenager, Sam Kanizay, 16, said he had wanted to do was soak
his sore legs at Dendy Street Beach in Brighton after a football match.
But when he stepped out of the water a half-hour later, his ankles were
pouring blood.
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Doctors and scientists said they were baffled by the severity of the injury.
The
leading theory seemed to be that Sam had inadvertently become lunch for
hungry sea lice, also known as marine isopods, a group of crustaceans
that are the marine versions of slaters and pill bugs that people might
be familiar with from their gardens. Sea lice are usually parasites of
fish. When they bite humans, they usually just leave tiny pinpricks that
can look like a rash.
Sam’s
father, Jarrod Kanizay, decided to investigate by dropping a hunk of
raw steak in the water where his son was attacked. He posted a video of
the result: hundreds of tiny sea creatures feasting on the meat.
But not everyone is convinced that the true culprit has been caught.
A
University of New South Wales associate professor, Alistair Poore, said
the animals in the video were not sea lice, but another group of small
scavengers called amphipods, which are not known to bite humans.
“You
can attract a lot of animals in the sea with raw meat,” Dr. Poore said.
“Even though it’s interesting, it doesn’t prove to me they were the
ones that bit his legs.”
Dr.
Poore said he was doubtful that this was a particularly aggressive
strain of sea lice but suspected that there may be greater numbers in
the area than normal — something that may be caused if a lot of dead
fish were in the area.
Although a similar sea lice attack
on another teenage boy was reported at a nearby beach in 2015, Dr.
Poore said sea lice lived all over the world: “It’s not an Australian
thing.”
“It’s
a fascinating story to show that the animals are out in urban areas, we
don’t live totally separated from nature,” Dr. Poore said. “Just like
there are mosquitoes and leeches on land that will bite humans, the same
happens in the ocean.”



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