CBS This Morning, July 4, 2019:
As millions of Americans head to the coast this holiday week, there are new concerns about rare, but potentially deadly flesh-eating bacteria found in warm waters. One woman, Lynn Fleming, died last week when she was infected after falling at a beach. Now, other families are sounding the alarm. Jericka Duncan reports.
Medical contributor says “Water is getting warmer”, no mention of climate warming.
A group of young adults trapped on a desert island find the water inhabited by a violent form of flesh-eating organisms.
Director:
Writer:
Arnold Drake (screenplay)
Stars:
Martin Kosleck, Byron Sanders, Barbara Wilkin |See full cast & crew »

This was from seawater, not the warm inland lakes and borrow pits that people swim in.
Seems Vibrio vulnificus lives in warm salty waters. .
“The bacteria thrive in warmer, salty water, it’s usually found mostly in southern waters”.
https://www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/news/20190618/flesh-eating-bacteria-on-rise-with-climate-change
They may not be flesh-eaters, but the various algal blooms in freshwater are not harmless either. If they are massive enough, they have negative impacts on human swimmers as well as the local flora and fauna.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/lake-hopatcong-new-jersey-largest-lake-cyanobacteria-harmful-algal-bloom-officials-warn/
PS Now we have to worry about “poop water” as well.
https://patch.com/new-jersey/pointpleasant/njs-swimming-pools-have-diarrhea-causing-poop-water
oh, in the fresh waters its the brain eating amoebas.
So, all good.
I’ll take a raincheck on that swim in the warm southern seas.
Here’s the best definition of the word “Hope” I’ve seen .
“Optimism has this confident look, feet up on the table. Hope is a verb with its sleeves rolled up.”
Redefining hope in a world threatened by climate change
https://www.yaleclimateconnections.org/2019/07/redefining-hope-in-a-world-threatened-by-climate-change/
Call me cautious – but I think I’ll also avoid the fresh water spots, until I’ve seen the list at least.
Antibiotics Are Flooding Earth’s Rivers
The collaborators sampled 711 river locations in 72 countries and then sent their samples back to Wilkinson and Boxall for analysis.
What Wilkinson and Boxall found is that 470 of those sites contained antibiotics, which come from sources including human excrement and drug manufacturing activity. Many of these antibiotics occur at concentrations above what the Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Industry Alliance—a group of private sector companies that aims to address the threat of antibiotic-resistant bacteria—says is safe. Here “safe” refers to those levels above which the alliance says bacteria can start to develop antibiotic resistance.
https://eos.org/articles/antibiotics-are-flooding-earths-rivers
That “Florida man” is constantly getting into trouble!