tOfficial Night Shift Thread v59 - Now with less Reluctant Leaders

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Y’all drinking yet?

Wow: Flesh eating killer bacteria offshore South Carolina:


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Billy Bailey, who grew up in York County, SC, south of Charlotte, was an avid fisherman. He died in 2017 from exposure to a toxic germ that scientists say is an increasing threat in coastal waters as sea level rises and the earth warms. Bailey is seen here in 2017 while at Edisto Beach, SC. Photo courtesy Karan Gordon


It’s called vibrio, a bacteria that research shows is sickening more people and being found more often in rivers, creeks and sounds along the Carolina coast. People who get toxic vibrio infections from swimming or handling fish, crabs and shrimp sometimes watch helplessly as toxins eat away at their flesh, turning small sores into gaping wounds.

The earth’s warming climate, which is causing sea levels to rise and storm surges to intensify, is a major reason dangerous strains of vibrio are an increasing threat to people who swim, fish and work in coastal waters across the planet, scientists say.

Since 2007, reports of illness from toxic forms of vibrio have tripled in South Carolina and nearly doubled in North Carolina, statistics show.
 
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Wow: Flesh eating killer bacteria offshore South Carolina:


View attachment 7658

Billy Bailey, who grew up in York County, SC, south of Charlotte, was an avid fisherman. He died in 2017 from exposure to a toxic germ that scientists say is an increasing threat in coastal waters as sea level rises and the earth warms. Bailey is seen here in 2017 while at Edisto Beach, SC. Photo courtesy Karan Gordon


It’s called vibrio, a bacteria that research shows is sickening more people and being found more often in rivers, creeks and sounds along the Carolina coast. People who get toxic vibrio infections from swimming or handling fish, crabs and shrimp sometimes watch helplessly as toxins eat away at their flesh, turning small sores into gaping wounds.

The earth’s warming climate, which is causing sea levels to rise and storm surges to intensify, is a major reason dangerous strains of vibrio are an increasing threat to people who swim, fish and work in coastal waters across the planet, scientists say.

Since 2007, reports of illness from toxic forms of vibrio have tripled in South Carolina and nearly doubled in North Carolina, statistics show.


Also in freshwater.
 
Wow: Flesh eating killer bacteria offshore South Carolina:


View attachment 7658

Billy Bailey, who grew up in York County, SC, south of Charlotte, was an avid fisherman. He died in 2017 from exposure to a toxic germ that scientists say is an increasing threat in coastal waters as sea level rises and the earth warms. Bailey is seen here in 2017 while at Edisto Beach, SC. Photo courtesy Karan Gordon


It’s called vibrio, a bacteria that research shows is sickening more people and being found more often in rivers, creeks and sounds along the Carolina coast. People who get toxic vibrio infections from swimming or handling fish, crabs and shrimp sometimes watch helplessly as toxins eat away at their flesh, turning small sores into gaping wounds.

The earth’s warming climate, which is causing sea levels to rise and storm surges to intensify, is a major reason dangerous strains of vibrio are an increasing threat to people who swim, fish and work in coastal waters across the planet, scientists say.

Since 2007, reports of illness from toxic forms of vibrio have tripled in South Carolina and nearly doubled in North Carolina, statistics show.
Dang! It got Billy??
 
aroused my body is ready GIF
 
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