Irish Daily Mirror

Sardines in Dingle are like fish out of water

Marine biologist says warm- water arrivals present opportunit­y

- BY LYNNE KELLEHER news@ irishmirro­r. ie

BIG CATCH Dingle Harbour, where the sardines arrived

Kevin Flannery with the sardines

MILLIONS of sardines are arriving in Irish waters – and a leading marine biologist wants us to take advantage of the phenomenon.

In recent days, more than 100 tonnes of the f i sh were l anded in Dingle Harbour by the boats Fiona KIII and The Ocean Venture II.

It comes in the wake of reports of warm- water octopus on the south coast and a record- breaking haul of anchovies in Kerry in the past few weeks – all species normally found off southern Europe.

The director of Dingle Oceanworld, Kevin Flannery, said he is astounded by the sheer volumes of warm- water fish turning up on the Kerry coast.

He added: “This is incredible. This could change the whole ambit of fishing.

“It’s fascinatin­g, you have these Mediterran­ean warm- water species arriving in huge volumes in Iri sh waters.

“We’ve had three specific species that could be commercial­ly developed since Christmas which are anchovies, sardines and octopus.

“We’ve lost 25% of catches to the British in Brexit. But now all of a sudden, we have huge volumes of these non- quota species in inshore Irish waters.

RESOURCE

“They are quota free because they are so short lived.

“I have t o cal l on t he St at e agencies and t he Department of the Marine to t ake action because there is a resource and a potential.”

Mr Flannery said the marine agencies i n Ire l and need t o develop the potential of the shoals upon shoals of Spanish fish arriving on our coasts.

He added: “Bord Bia have to look at the markets, BIM have to look at what vessels can fish them and the Marine Institute has to look at the potential.

“We need to look at what stock of them is there, how long will it last, where are they spawning and what’s the market for them.”

The marine biologist said countries such as Iceland are developing new fisheries.

He added: “Iceland took it upon themselves when they found there was mackerel coming in there and they are taking over 100,000 tonnes per year.

“I can’t see why we can’t look at the potential of anchovies and sardines and develop a fishery.

“For 40 years I ’ve been doing this and now we have this.

“It’s a huge resource and it has to be managed sustainabl­y.”

This is incredible... this could change the whole ambit of fishing

KEVIN FLANNERY ON THE SPECIES FOUND IN IRELAND

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland