Tuna washes ashore on Isle of Mull08/10/2011 18:16:09
BIG FISH: The 1.8 metre tuna found off the Isle of Mull. Picture: Roddy Wyness ‘We thought it must be a porpoise' October 2011: A tuna has been found washed up on the shore of Laggan Sands, on the Isle of Mull, prompting an investigation by the Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust (HWDT). Morven Summers, volunteer coordinator at HWDT, said: ‘We were a wee bit dubious at first and thought that the reporter may have mistaken a porpoise, however when we arrived at Laggan Sands we were shocked to see the huge fish on the shore.' It's believed that the fish is a bluefin tuna; a large, torpedo-shaped fish that can travel at speeds of up to 43 miles per hour and weighs, on average, 550lb, although much larger specimens are not uncommon. 'Seeing the fish up close was fantastic' Although not many consider the waters off the west coast of Scotland to play host to such a fish, historically tuna did frequent these waters. Dr Clive Fox, from the Scottish Association of Marine Science in Oban, explains: ‘Bluefin tuna are rare in our waters but not unprecedented, indeed there used to be a commercial and sport fishery for them before the war.' Already evidence of bluefin tuna migrating to UK ‘A decline in the stocks of herring resulted in a decline in migratory tuna which originally came from the Mediterranean migrating all round the west coast of Scotland.' In September 1989, a 400lb tuna was reported caught close to the Isle of Lewis. Unfortunately the tuna carcass was too decomposed for full analysis, however the fish's otoliths (ear bones) will be recovered and from these the age of the fish can be determined.
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