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Posted on: Friday, June 10, 2005
What stung paddlers? That's still a mystery
By Jan TenBruggencate
Advertiser Staff Writer
A
mysterious marine organism stung or bit several canoe club members
during the past two weekend regattas at the canoe beach in Ke'ehi
Lagoon, but scientists say they can't be certain what it was.
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Hui Wa'a canoe season at Ke'ehi Lagoon opened May 29. Since then, canoe
crew members have been stung or bitten by a mysterious organism.
Gregory Yamamoto • The Honolulu Advertiser
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Club
members described long-lasting, angry red spots on the upper parts of
their bodies. Those most affected were "holders" who swim at the bow
and sterns of canoes to keep them in position before the start of
races.
"I've
never seen so many people stung so badly," said paddler Catherine
Fuller of Nui Nalu Canoe Club. "The two guys in our club that are the
worst seem to have them concentrated at chest level — about where the
surface of the water would hit them when treading water."
The
state Health Department has ordered a plankton net and plans to sweep
the waters at the canoe beach to find samples, so the organism
responsible can be identified, said Watson Okubo, supervisor of
monitoring and analysis section in the department's Clean Water Branch.
The
situation is not normal at the beach, although there were some reports
of stinging during the state's high school paddling season earlier this
year. O'ahu Hawaiian Canoe Racing Association president Hannie Anderson
said her association's Ke'ehi activities are on hold until further
notice.
Okubo
said he heard that one paddler who rubbed petroleum jelly on his skin
seemed to have been protected from stings. He said he was also going to
look into a commercial product, a sunscreen called Safe Sea that was
developed in Florida and is marketed as protection against stings by
jellyfish, Portuguese man-of-war and sea lice. It is sold at Waikiki
Beach Activities on the beach near the Hilton Hawaiian Village.
Waikiki Surf Club paddler Luana Froiseth said she has "millions" of stings after holding canoes last weekend.
"I
quit after four races. That stinging was too painful. They aren't just
hitting you once. They keep stinging and stinging," Froiseth said. Okubo
said he has been told that tiny stinging sponges might be the problem.
Alton Miyasaka, an aquatic biologist with the state Division of Aquatic
Resources, said that "it could be a number of different things."
Among
his suspects are tiny jellyfish so small that they might not be
noticed, but still bearing powerful nematocysts or stinging cells.
"In
calm inshore areas, they just kind of sit until the next tide takes
them out, and they can be pretty hard to see. I've been in situations
like that, and they will sting you," Miyasaka said.
He
said another culprit could be marine creatures called bryozoans, a
group of small marine animals that can look like either corals or
algae. Some of them have stinging cells, and stinging bits can be
knocked into the water column when they are disturbed by people walking
on them or doing construction work along the coastline.
Both
University of Hawai'i botany professor Celia Smith and zoology
professor Julie Brock said a number of small, stinging animals — or
parts of stinging animals — could be responsible. They could include
forms of cnidarians, a vast group of marine animals that can include
jellyfish; Portuguese man-of-war; reef-building and other corals; sea
anemones; black corals; and hydroids. Smith
said another possibility — although it does not seem to exactly fit the
Ke'ehi symptoms — is a blue-green alga called Lyngbya majuscula, a
photosynthetic bacterium that can cause something commonly called
"swimmer's itch." It can be particularly annoying in places on a
swimmer's body where it has rubbed between the skin and swimming
attire. Fuller
said that some paddlers wondered if mangrove clearing near the canoe
beach might have released stinging animals into the water. Okubo said
he has been told by scientists that the clearing could be linked to the
stinging.
Reach Jan TenBruggencate at jant@honoluluadvertiser.com or (808) 245-3074.
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