A magnified crab louse
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Pubic lice

Crab lice (singular, louse), scientific name Phthirus pubis and commonly called "crabs" due to their resemblence to the crab, are one of three kinds of human lice in the large group of lice families, the others being head lice and body lice, which live in clothing. more...

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They are wingless, about 1 to 3 mm long. They attach themselves to hair strands, and hatch out of pods with lids, or "nits", that are too tightly attached to be brushed off but must be removed by pulling with the nails or a fine-toothed comb.

General information

The crab louse can live in almost any form of humanoid hair, but is found most commonly in pubic hair, leading to its other common name of pubic louse. Its legs are adapted to climbing along relatively widely spaced hairs, and so can be found in eyelashes, pubic hair, beards, moustaches, and even armpit hairs. The individual louse can survive up to a week apart from its necessary human host, so that crab lice can be passed on in sleeping bags and bedding. The female may lay up to 40 eggs a time, resulting in a fluctuating but growing population. The louse feeds on blood and can leave irritating spots on the skin, sometimes mistaken for pimples, a condition called Pediculosis pubis.

Pubic lice have legs that are spaced further apart than head lice, this is an adaptation that enables them to move around more easily in their habitat.

The female louse glues her eggs, called "nits", which look like tiny white beads, to hair shafts. Lice bite through the skin to suck blood, and the bite causes itching. Bites can become secondarily infected; scratching may break the skin and help cause secondary infection. The most common symptom of crab lice is itching of genital area.

Pubic lice are normally spread by sexual contact and are considered a sexually transmitted disease, but can also be spread by sharing clothes or bedding. A common misbelief is that infestation can be spread by sitting on a toilet seat. This is not likely since lice cannot live long away from a warm human body. Also, lice do not have feet designed to walk or hold onto smooth surfaces such as toilet seats.

Life cycle

There are three stages in the life of a pubic louse: the nit, the nymph, and the adult.

  • Nit: Nits are pubic lice eggs. They are hard to see and are found firmly attached to the hair shaft. They are oval and usually yellow to white. Nits take about 1 week to hatch.
  • Nymph: The nit hatches into a baby louse called a nymph. It looks like an adult pubic louse, but is smaller. Nymphs mature into adults about 7 days after hatching. To live, the nymph must feed on blood.
  • Adult: The adult pubic louse resembles a miniature crab when viewed through a strong magnifying glass. Pubic lice have six legs, but their two front legs are very large and look like the pincher claws of a crab; this how they got the nickname "crabs." Pubic lice are tan to greyish-white in color. Females lay nits; they are usually larger than males. To live, adult lice need to feed on blood. If the louse falls off a person, it dies within 1-2 days.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Key Dome fixtures taken out of sale - but not the pubic lice
From Independent, The (London), 2/22/01 by Marie Woolf Chief Political Correspondent

THE AUCTION of the contents of the Millennium Dome has been scaled down after the Government feared that "stripping the Dome" would deter possible buyers for the site.

Some important fixtures, including the 2,000-seat arena, have been withdrawn from next week's sale because they may be needed by a future owner.

Auctioneers have been told not to sell the Dome's central stadium, where an acrobatic show was staged, and lifts and escalators. The auction organisers have also withdrawn lighting and audiovisual equipment, the 27 turnstiles, and barriers, fencing and handrails from the catalogue .

A spokesman for Henry Butcher, which is running the auction, said: "They started off with the thought that everything would go. We are not selling the seating in the arena and the turnstiles and other parts of the infrastructure. Legacy has lost its preferred bidder status and these things could be needed." No contents of the Dome have so far been sold to private bidders as planned because, a source said, the bids were not high enough.

Auctioneers have placed a pounds 1,500 reserve on the mechanical beating heart from the Body zone. The bus stop from the Living Island zone will cost a minimum of pounds 90. The reserve for a set of linked hamster cages has been set at pounds 490. But there is no reserve on the pubic lice in the Body zone or the 6ft replica hamster.

About 7,000 lots are to be sold in the auction from 27 February to 2 March. They include 5,000 sets of cutlery, a "living beach" with pebbles, a bathing hut and nine Victorian swimming suits, and 15,000 costumes. The auction is expected to raise between pounds 3m and pounds 5m.

Copyright 2001 Independent Newspapers UK Limited
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

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