#15534
Reef Cleaning Station Stop!
Brian_V - 10/11/2013 8:13 AM
Category: General
Replies: 4

In Fiji, I let the cleaner shrimp clean my teeth like this kid did. Anybody else given this a try?
Pretty cool experience!



Teenager learns how to get SHRIMP to clean his teeth by imitating behaviour of fish off Bali:

- Russell Laman imitated the behaviour of the surrounding fish swarm to entice the cleaner shrimp into
his mouth
- The 13-year-old queued with the waiting fish and then opened his mouth when the shrimps came near
These unique photos capture the moment a boy has his teeth picked clean by amazing underwater shrimp.


These fascinating creatures spend their lives diving inside the mouths of fish to remove the parasites that
lurk there.

Russell Laman imitated the behaviour of the surrounding fish swarm to entice the cleaner shrimp into his
mouth whilst snorkelling with his father Tim Laman in Bali, Indonesia.

The 13-year-old queued with the waiting fish and then opened his mouth when the shrimps came near.

The shrimp then incredibly started to clean Russell’s mouth and remove food from between the boys
teeth whilst Tim took photographs.

Russell Laman, from Lexington, Massachusetts, said: ‘It felt like tiny little dentists picking away at my teeth
and scuttling around my mouth, it tickled a little but not too badly.

‘I had watched fish getting cleaned at cleaning stations before and decided to try it out myself.
‘I thought it would be really cool to experience shrimp in my mouth first hand.

‘It is a large part of the ecosystem underwater and many fish rely on the shrimp so I decided to rely on
them as well.’

Father and son discovered the fish ’cleaning station’ where the shrimp wait for customers, in a beautiful
outcrop of sponges growing from some rocks.

The area was loaded with cleaner shrimp and surrounded by hoards of fish.

Russell who has been diving with his father for seven years is unfazed by the dangers of holding his mouth
open underwater.

He learnt how to get the shrimp out of his mouth when he needs to breathe, by imitating the behaviour
of the fish.

Russell said: ‘I observed that the shrimp are always keeping an eye on the mouth of the fish and as soon
as it starts to close they shoot out.

‘I do the same thing as the fish, when I start to run out of air I slowly close my mouth and the shrimp get
out of there.’

The behaviour of species like the White-banded Cleaner Shrimp is well known to hard-core biologists and
divers but capturing the process on a human is very rare.

Tim said: ‘It really is pretty amazing that these little shrimp immediately recognize a human mouth as
analogous to a fish mouth and go in looking for bits of food.

‘It takes a relaxed diver to take out his regulator at 23 metres deep and present your mouth wide open
to some shrimp.

‘You have to hold your breath for I’d say at least 30 seconds to have a reasonable chance, and Russell
calmly held his breath for over 40 seconds.

‘It is pretty unusual for a kid of Russell’s age to be able to do it.’



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2448412/Teenager-Rus...viour-fish-Bali.html
#20387
LatitudeAdjustment - 10/12/2013 6:36 AM
I never wanted them in my mouth but I have let them work around my fingernails.

Here’s a cleaning station in Roatan.

#12120
Eric_R - 10/12/2013 6:02 PM
Pretty awesome!
#116
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Scubaforlife77 - 10/25/2013 2:07 PM
Ok...The first thing I was taught when diving was never hold your breath. It says he holds his for 40 seconds or so. How is this safe?
#15534
Subscribed
Brian_V - 10/25/2013 2:42 PM
From Scubaforlife77: Ok...The first thing I was taught when diving was never hold your breath. It says he holds his for 40 seconds or so. How is this safe?
...well, if you’re ABSOLUTELY SURE that you’re stationary, not changing depth at all, you can do this! But you must be ABSOLUTELY SURE of this! If you have doubts about doing this, I wouldn’t even try it until you have the experience to do this!