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Trawler nets monster sunfish 25.08.09

Holy Mola!

by Linda McGrory

THE crew of a Greencastle trawler got a surprise 'catch of the day' when they hauled up their nets to reveal one of the biggest fish they had ever seen.
The MFV Northern Celt was fishing at Stanton Bank around 25 miles north west of Malin Head when they netted the monster sunfish earlier this month.
Fisherman Juri Petrov from Estonia beside the giant sunfish caught off the coast of Malin Head on Greencastle trawler MFV Northern Celt.
Fisherman Jim Farren said: "I've been fishing for 14 years and have seen a lot of sunfish over the years, but nothing this size."
"The beast", as the stunned local crewmen dubbed it, was more than 5ft long and nearly 6ft in height from fin-tip to fin-tip.
The ocean sunfish - Latin name, Mola Mola - is the world's largest bony fish. It has been known to tip the scales at two tonnes and can measure up to 11ft from fin tip to fin tip.
Sunfishes are found in tropical as well as polar seas and can be mistaken for sharks, because of their large dorsal fin. A team of international scientists, co-ordinated by the Coastal & Marine Resources Centre at University College Cork, succeeded in satellite-tagging ocean sunfish off the coast of Dingle, Co Kerry, two years ago. Juri Petrov, Estonia, left and Greencastle's Mark Reynolds pictured with the giant sunfish they caught off the coast of Malin Head on the MFV Northern Celt.
Irish fisheries research group, Taighde Mara Teo, provided logistical and technical support while the Marine Institute and Údaras Na Gaeltachta funded the research.
It is thought that increased sightings of sunfish in Irish waters could be a sign of climate change. Meanwhile, this fine sunfish specimen was captured alive and released without harm by the Northern Celt crewmen including Juri Petrov from Estonia and Mark Reynolds from Greencastle.
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