Irish Marine Life
inshore offshore play science coral-reefs crabs ag snámh news think imeachtaíArchive for February, 2010
Monsters and Mermaids
Placed high and dry upon the clean blue pebbles by a spring tide, the mermaid’s purse I found last week was not hard to spot. Another purse some months ago was easier to miss, dark and unlovely as they are and cast as it was amongst the deposited kelp of similar leathery brown shades. That relationship of camouflage was once so necessary underwater, when the four pronged purse held a tiny shark, skate or ray and the kelp held to the rock and provided cover for the purse until its inhabitant was ready to leave. How curious that now, far from those dynamic undersea worlds, they defiantly continue this relationship as they desiccate together on the still shore, the kelp now concealing the purse from the eyes of hurried beach walkers.
The purses, egg cases which once protected a fertilised embryo, are the unremarkable reproductive clue to species such as the dogfish, our smallest and most common shark. But not all sharks reproduce like this. Mayo’s legendary basking sharks, which once entertained enough mystery in their labelling as a sea monster as Gaeilge (An Liabhán Mór) are still almost a mystery to scientists in this regard. It is believed the sharks give birth to live young, but a pregnant female has only ever been seen once and nobody knows when or where or how many young are born. Porbeagle sharks which have been landed in Clew Bay definitely do give birth to live young, usually four at a time. And although they won’t be found in Clew Bay anytime soon, its worth noting the female hammerhead shark which gave birth in a zoo in The U.S. in 2001 – despite no male contact in three years. Sharks are apparently capable of such immaculate feats, but only in extreme circumstances and it’s bad for genetic diversity.
The un-immaculate mermaids’ purses are not so dramatic. And the almost blind dogfish, which spends 23 hours a day dozing on the seafloor, is no hammerhead, but there is still useful information to be gleaned from them. Compiling records of their distribution can provide valuable information on the location of nursery areas of sharks, skates and rays. Many of these are severely threatened such as the common skate, which was once found throughout European waters, now ironically titled as it is only found in a few select locations. Purse Search Ireland are one group who have undertaken the task of compiling this info, and provide a user-friendly online form at www.marinedimensions.ie for you to log your report.
Sharks, skates and rays are related and together make up the Elasmobranch class of fish, a very ancient class dating back 400 million years. They are different to other fish having cartilage skeletons instead of bone. The Dogfish (Sycliorhinus canicula) is found all around our coastline in sandy bays and off-shore. It feeds mostly on prawns, crabs and occasionally fish. They breed annually, and nine months after mating, the female lays approximately 25 eggs which develop inside mermaid’s purses for nine months. The Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus) is a filter feeder, passively filtering small fish, invertebrates and zooplankton near the surface with its gaping mouth open. Recent satellite tagging studies have confirmed that the some sharks undertake huge migrations in winter. They were almost fished to extinction in the west of Ireland until the 1970s but are now believed to be making a recovery.
The violence of our peaceful seas
Normal North Atlantic order has restored itself after a most remarkable 4 weeks in Ireland’s recent meteorological history. It will be hard now to discern any surface goings-on between shore and horizon with wind and swell likely to run for weeks on end as they often do in January and February, driven to us by lows sweeping across from Newfoundland in our general direction.
These lows stopped for that extraordinarily Siberian month, blocked by a strong high pressure air- mass to our North which made for a very still Atlantic allowing me one evening to sharply define the space between caudal fin and ocean and see through the burst of spray between dorsal fin and sky. It could be September but for the 10 degree water I thought as the three dolphins surged powerfully high out of a flat sea and all of this silhouetted by a low cloudless sunset over Renvyle.
Such acrobatic behaviour, in particular whirling vertical leaps is more noted of the smaller common dolphin which is usually found far offshore over the continental shelf in great numbers. They are only occasionally seen inshore and that’s usually in the southwest of the country. There was not enough light to be sure but these were most likely bottlenoses, which do from time to time leap and spin like this, and bow ride and surf of course too. But then the bottlenoses are continuously surprising us. Reports of porpoises with great shark-like chunks taken from them a hundred miles or so south of here this summer led to the surprising discovery of research, mostly from Britain, on violent bottlenose attacks on porpoises.
Where the two species occur together, the most common cause of washed up porpoises’ death was attacks from bottlenose dolphins according to The British Environment Ministry. They don’t compete for food and scientists are guessing that it is a simple territorial aggression, with serious costs for the muc mhara (the porpoise is the pig of the sea in Irish). Damage recorded to porpoises includes broken ribs, internal organ rupture as well as bite marks. Have some of the many that wash up on Mayo’s shores experienced the same underwater violence? Probably, but data and studies could say for sure.
The bottlenose is not the indifferent play seeker we may have thought and neither does the muc mhara dip from cuain to cuainín in Clew Bay as carefree as it could appear.







