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‘Prehistoric Looking’ Sixgill Shark Seen Swimming Off The Coast Of County Clare

Sixgill shark has been seen swimming off the coast of Ireland.

‘Prehistoric Looking’ Sixgill Shark Seen Swimming Off The Coast Of County Clare

The 13-foot-long “prehistoric looking” sixgill shark (Hexanchus griseus) was discovered off County Clare on the west coast, at a relatively shallow depth of about 200 feet.

This is the first time the prehistoric-looking creature has been filmed in shallow European waters.

The team of biologists, from Trinity College Dublin, Queen's University Belfast (QUB) and Belfast-based marine survey company Fjordstrong, filmed the specimen using modified “Auto-Release Baited Underwater Video systems” (ABUVs) – patented fish-identifying video recorders.

The underwater footage shows the shark serenely swimming past the lens in front of a bait bag – a wire mesh full of chopped up and rancid mackerel.

Dr Patrick C. Collins, who is a lecturer in marine biology at QUB and member of the project, told MailOnline, “This was the first time sixgills have been filmed in shallow water in daylight in European waters, as far as we know”.

“They are normally regarded as a deep-water species.”

“This highlights how Ireland is a biodiversity hotspot for all sharks, skates and rays.”

“The experts used the bait bag to attract the shark, although it did not go for it and may have be lured by the lights,” Dr Collins said.

“We observed a lot of smaller fish (wrasse, conger eels, ling and catsharks) feeding on the bait which may also have attracted the shark,” he said. “It circled for a moment and then disappeared.”

Dr Collins said he is not able to disclose the exact location where it was filmed – only that it was seen off the coast of County Clare.

The team is only beginning to answer the mystery as to why sixgills are lurking off County Clare. They will expand their ocean exploration of this area over the next 18 months.

“Sixgill sharks are an incredible species and this particular site off the Irish coastline is of particular interest as large, females have regularly been sighted in shallow waters,” said Haley Dolton, a biologist at Trinity College Dublin.

“Sixgills in this location are mostly females, suggesting it is an important area for reproductive purposes,” Dolton added.

“We are going to need a bigger boat to come back here next year and collect more data – we have only just scratched below the surface,” said Dr Collins.

Sixgill sharks can grow to 15 feet in length and weigh 1,000lbs.

They are apex predator, feeding on other fish including sharks, skates and rays, bony fish, squid and crabs. They have also been known to scavenge on dead animals such as seals.

They have razor-sharp teeth and resemble fossil sharks from the Triassic period. 

Sixgill shark typically inhabits dark waters off the continental shelf, at depths of up to 8,200 feet (2,500 metres).

It spends much of its time miles off-shore off the continental shelf and as a result has little interaction with humans – making this a rare sighting. 

According to the experts, Ireland has the richest diversity in Europe when it comes to elasmobranchii – a sub-class of giant fish.

Basking sharks are found regularly cruising by, and it is also one of the last refugia on earth for the critically endangered flapper skate – the largest skate in the world.

“It's like an aquatic Jurassic Park out there,” said Dr Nick Payne, an assistant professor in Trinity's School of Natural Sciences.

“Ireland is the gateway to the Atlantic and we are increasingly amazed at how important Irish waters seem to be for these huge shark and ray species. It means we in Ireland have a responsibility to look after them.”

“Only by working together with commercial and sports fishers, conservation bodies and government agencies, citizen naturalists and the marine technology industry can we begin to realise and understand our great marine diversity – a heritage of all the people of Ireland.”

“With this knowledge, we are better placed to manage the 90 per cent of our state that currently lie underwater so that future generations can gasp in awe at the giants in our midst.”

Earlier this year, a group of British fishermen caught 14 sixgill sharks in a “secret location” in the north Atlantic dubbed Jurassic Park.

Because of their weight, each shark took an average of 40 minutes to reel in to the Welsh-registered fishing boat.

All of the sharks were returned to the sea safe and well afterwards, but not before the fishermen snapped photos holding them.

The shark gets its name from the fact that is has six gill slits, unlike most other sharks which have only five. 

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