Giant squid Caught Near Ireland
IRELAND – A Giant squid was caught off the southwest coast of Ireland
According to Irish times, a giant squid was caught off the southwest coast this week and is only the sixth documented Irish sighting of the elusive marine creature on record.
The giant squid, measuring 5.8 metres, is the first seen in Irish waters in 22 years.
The first known sighting of a giant squid was in 1673 near the Aran Islands.
The latest find was caught in a trawling net on Monday by fisherman Pete Flannery, skipper of the Cú na Mara, near the Porcupine Basin – 190km off the Kerry coast.
Mr Flannery’s father, Michael, caught two giant squids off the Kerry coast in 1995, the last time one was caught in Irish waters.
The squid was brought to Dingle’s Oceanworld Aquarium and from there will be sent to the Natural History Museum.
“The total records from Ireland show there was one caught west of the Aran Islands and two in Kerry in 1995,” Aquarium director Kevin Flannery said. “Records show the first sighting of a giant squid was on October 3rd, 1673. The next wasn’t until 1875 in Inisbofin and then there were three in 1995.
The squid found this week is large than the 2013 specimen, the aquarium said on Facebook. “The mantle is and diameter of suckers are but tentacles slightly shorter but on the whole the head is much bigger and seems heavier! The beak is amazing!”
“The giant squid is the one the sperm whales have to dive deep down for, they go extremely deep, down 40 or 50 feet. They’re so elusive, hardly anyone has ever seen one. National Geographic has only filmed them recently for the first time ever off the coast of New Zealand. ”
Also known as Kraken, the giant squid was feared by fishermen and sailors.
“If found inside in a net, they were known to grab sailors and spread their tentacles around them,” he said. “They will cut and they’ll bore into you, once they grab you.”
The Porcupine bank is just at the end of a shelf that drops down 3,000 metres to the ocean’s bed. “Obviously, this one, which is male, came up to feed and was chasing fish when it got caught in the net,” Mr Flannery said. “We know it was a young male and it would have grown much bigger.”
Giant squids normally swim in the deep sea.
The giant squid, “Architeuthis” to scientists, is sometimes described as one of the last mysteries of the ocean, being part of a world so hostile to humans that it has been little explored.
In 2006, scientists from Japan’s National Science Museum managed to lure a relatively small 3.5 metre-long giant squid to the surface.