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  2. “200 stings or more.” Have you had sea lice after visiting a ...

    www.aol.com/200-stings-more-had-sea-100000487.html

    Unlike head lice, sea lice are not insects. Instead, they are microscopic jellyfish larvae, transparent and unseen to the human eye, which get trapped underneath bathing suits, in hair and under ...

  3. According to the Florida Department of Health in Miami-Dade County, sea lice are generally baby jellyfish that sting swimmers once caught in their bathing suits, caps, or skin folds. Lying on the ...

  4. What You Should Know About These Nasty, Rash-Causing Sea Lice ...

    www.aol.com/news/know-nasty-rash-causing-sea...

    What You Should Know About These Nasty, Rash-Causing Sea Lice Reported in Florida Beaches

  5. Seabather's eruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabather's_eruption

    Seabather's eruption is common throughout the range of Linuche unguiculata in the Caribbean, Florida, Mexico, and Gulf States. [7] Cases were first identified in Brazil in 2001. [7] The closely related Linuche aquila, found anywhere between Malaysia, the Philippines and the east coast of Africa, is also known to cause the condition. [8]

  6. Linuche aquila - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linuche_aquila

    The larvae of both species are known as sea lice, and are causative agents for a condition known as seabather's eruption. [3] They cause itchy red rashes with raised pustules in areas where the larvae get trapped under swimwear and discharge their stinging cells into the skin. [4]

  7. Sea louse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_louse

    Sea-lice infection causes a generalized chronic stress response in fish since feeding and attachment cause changes in the mucus consistency and damage the epithelium resulting in loss of blood and fluids, electrolyte changes, and cortisol release. This can decrease salmon immune responses and make them susceptible to other diseases and reduce ...

  8. Sea lice are infesting Gulf Coast beaches - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/2016/06/07/sea-lice-are...

    Sea lice have been lurking in Florida waters for years but what they'll do to you could make you sick.

  9. Pediculosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pediculosis

    From each egg or "nit" may hatch one nymph that will grow and develop to the adult louse. Lice feed on blood once or more often each day by piercing the skin with their tiny needle-like mouthparts. While feeding they excrete saliva, which irritates the skin and causes itching. [8] Lice cannot burrow into the skin. [citation needed]