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Another shark’s tale… 02.07.10

Joe hooks and releases 5ft tope

A Moville angler hooked a five-foot shark last week and promptly released it back into Lough Foyle.
Joe Doherty said he was stunned when he baited the large tope but soon realised the fish was on the endangered species list.
“We were fishing for skate on Thursday evening around 200 metres off the shore in Moville when I hooked the tope,” said Joe.
“It has been 25 to 30 years since anglers used to fish for these in the Foyle. I remember dozens and dozens being dumped every week on Moville Quay, after being taken in from the Moville Sea Angling Festival back in the early 80’s.

Joe Doherty who caught this 5ft tope in Lough Foyle.
“They were just killed to be weighed for competition results, and then thrown away as waste because nobody ate them. But they are now officially on the endangered species list,” he added.
The local man said Lough Swilly is also known for competition tope fishing and he hoped Moville could also attract more angling tourists.
“Maybe if people knew tope can be caught in the Foyle as well, it might attract tourists of a fishing nature to our shores too.”
According to sea-angling-ireland.org, catch and release of tope is essential for the species’ survival.
They travel huge distances with one tagged tope found to have migrated a whopping 2,185 nautical miles. The fish, tagged in Co Kerry, was recaptured off the coast of Tunisia less than three years after it had been released.
Meanwhile, the longest period a tagged tope has been in the wild was 5,538 days, or over 15 years.
This fish was tagged in Donegal Bay in 1982 and taken by rod and line off the west coast of Scotland in 1997 before being released again alive.
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