Marlborough Express

What really ate teen: Flesh-eating bugs at Brighton beach

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AUSTRALIA: News of a teenage boy’s legs being treated as dinner by flesh-eating sea critters as he took a dip at a Melbourne beach has brought back all-too-vivid memories of the frenzied feasting in 1970s flick Piranha.

Social media and radio talkback was awash on Monday with members of the public vowing never to swim in the sea again after 16-year-old Sam Kanizay emerged from a dip at Brighton beach on Saturday night with his lower legs covered in blood and tiny bite marks.

Sam, who had continued to bleed so profusely from the pinprick-size holes in his legs, that his father rushed him to hospital, where his bizarre case puzzled doctors.

St Kilda Football Club told its players to avoid bathing at Brighton beach after the incident. Saints midfielder Koby Stevens joked that ‘‘I’ve still got my feet today’’.

Museums Victoria helped to shed light on the incident. It confirmed that tiny flesh-eating creatures were probably behind the attack.

Museum marine scientist Dr Genefor Walker-Smith has examined specimens collected by Sam’s father, Jarrod Kanizay – using bites of meat as lures – at Brighton, and said the creatures were sea fleas, not sea lice as first thought, and there was no cause for alarm.

She said the number of bites sustained by 16-year-old Sam was unusual and a swarm of fleas might have been attracted by a cut in his skin, or Sam might have stepped near a fish carcass they were feeding on.

Sea fleas are scavenging amphipod crustacean­s belonging to the lysianassi­d group. The bad news is that they’re found all over Port Phillip Bay and all over the world in hundreds of species.

‘‘They’re there all the time; you could put a piece of meat in the water, anywhere in the bay, and you could find them,’’ Dr WalkerSmit­h said.

But she wouldn’t recommend closing the beach, and said people shouldn’t stop swimming there.

‘‘I think this is quite a rare thing. I really just think [Sam] was in the wrong place at the wrong time, probably.’’

Walker-Smith would be happy to swim at Brighton beach herself but suggested that swimmers watch out for dead fish lying around and be ’’careful where you put your feet’’.

She said it was not surprising that Sam’s bleeding would not stop – this symptom had been seen in bite cases from crustacean­s before, although she hadn’t heard of it among crustacean­s in this group.

‘‘It is possible that the amphipod has an anti-coagulant that it released like leeches do, so it stops the blood from clotting.’’

Walker-Smith said sea fleas inhabited colder and warmer water, and were more active at night, to avoid fish predators .

Paul Duckett, a daily swimmer with the Brighton Icebergers since 2001, said what had happened to Sam was bizarre and locals had asked his group whether they would still swim on Monday.

But the dozen or so winter regulars had ‘‘shrugged it off’’ and swam straight out as normal from Dendy Street beach. ‘‘We’re prob- ably too gritty and tough and old for those creatures to worry about,’’ he said.

‘‘We swim there every day and we’re in the water for anything from 15 to 30 minutes, and no one’s ever experience­d anything like this,’’ he said. - Fairfax

 ?? PHOTO: FAIRFAX ?? Sam Kanizay, 16, was bitten by sea fleas at Brighton Beach while soaking his legs after an Australian Rules football match.
PHOTO: FAIRFAX Sam Kanizay, 16, was bitten by sea fleas at Brighton Beach while soaking his legs after an Australian Rules football match.
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