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florida joe

Well-Known Member
This 4-foot-long sea worm was devastating coral reef and terrorizing fish at an aquarium in Cornwall, southwestern England, the Daily Mail reported Tuesday. The creature, known as "Barry," devoured bait traps -- hooks and all -- and bit through a 20-pound fishing line before staffers finally managed to capture it. The worm was moved to its own tank.
Initially, aquarium workers weren't sure what was harming the coral, which in some cases was cut in half. After weeks with no clues, they decided to take the display apart to see if they could find the culprit, the Mail reported.
Workers laid bait traps, which were mysteriously destroyed in the night, as the glutton apparently devoured the fish hooks right along with the bait. Finally, staffers spotted the tropical worm, which bit through a 20-pound fishing line before staffers were able to successfully remove it from the tank.
The creature is covered with nasty bristles that sting and can cause permanent numbness in humans, the newspaper said.
"Tt really does look like something out of a horror movie," Matt Slater, the aquarium's curator, told the Mail. "It's over 4 feet long with these bizarre-looking jaws."
Slater said he suspects Barry arrived as a baby in a shipment from another aquarium. The worm now lives in his own tank.
 

spanko

Active Member
Saw that Joe. Interesting they never really identify what kind of worm it is though. Have been reading on another site about a persons war with a Bobbit Worm he had in his tank. Sounds to me, and from the picture they posted, that it might be the same thing. Nasty creature out of the Tremors movie...........
 

florida joe

Well-Known Member
Originally Posted by spanko
http:///forum/post/3007017
Saw that Joe. Interesting they never really identify what kind of worm it is though. Have been reading on another site about a persons war with a Bobbit Worm he had in his tank. Sounds to me, and from the picture they posted, that it might be the same thing. Nasty creature out of the Tremors movie...........
yea it is wild looking
 

spanko

Active Member
This is a bobbit Eunice aphroditois


Here is what they found in the Aquarium Joe referenced.
 

natclanwy

Active Member
Man, I can so relate to this article. I still have at least one euncid worm loose in my tank although it hasn't made an appearance since I tried to catch it by hand the last time.
 

natclanwy

Active Member
After a little reading bobbits cand get up to 3m long so this is a small speciman. I read somewhere that there are some species of sea worms that can get over 20' long.
 

spanko

Active Member
Originally Posted by florida joe
http:///forum/post/3007062
Henry perhaps a visual on why its called the Bobbit worm is in order

Fairly sure visuals would not be ........ummmm..........appropriate or even allowed here.
However a cleaned up written explanation mayhaps!!!
"Lorena Bobbitt, known for cutting of the ***** of her husband back in 1993 in the US... This is where the fellow here got his name:
Eunice aphroditois aka. Bobbit Worm
Commonly know as Bobbit Worm, the reason why he got this lovely name is due to the fact that the female worm attacks the male ***** and feeds it to her young after mating..."
 
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