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Kayakers haul bluefin tuna ashore in Cornwall | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A rare tuna fish has been towed to a Cornish beach after a group of kayakers found it floating in the sea. | |
The fish, believed to be a bluefin tuna, was discovered floating in the water at Kingsand by a group of friends on holiday. | |
The species is currently listed as critically endangered. | |
Although potentially worth hundreds of thousands of pounds internationally, it is illegal to catch or sell the species from British waters. | |
Claire Wallerstein, a volunteer strandings recorder for the Cornwall Wildlife Trust, said she "just could not believe it" when she saw the fish, which took six men to lift. | |
"Someone came to my house to tell me there was a dead dolphin on the beach. | "Someone came to my house to tell me there was a dead dolphin on the beach. |
"They were coming out of the sea with this huge monster, but then I could see it was a tuna." | "They were coming out of the sea with this huge monster, but then I could see it was a tuna." |
The find by the five friends - Charlotte Chambers, Shauna Creamer, Hannah Ford, Sarah Little and Laura Pickervance - was reported to the authorities and would be transported to the University of Exeter in Falmouth for examination, Ms Wallerstein said. | |
Bluefin tuna is found in the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean, with smaller quantities fished from the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean. | Bluefin tuna is found in the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean, with smaller quantities fished from the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean. |
Bluefin numbers began to decline in the 1960s with the introduction of new fishing methods, with over-fishing leading to its critically endangered status. | Bluefin numbers began to decline in the 1960s with the introduction of new fishing methods, with over-fishing leading to its critically endangered status. |
The biggest market for the fish is Japan, where people eat it raw in sushi. | The biggest market for the fish is Japan, where people eat it raw in sushi. |
Prices can be high for such tuna because of its rarity. | Prices can be high for such tuna because of its rarity. |
In 2013, a 489lb (222kg) bluefin tuna was bought at an auction for £1.05m by a sushi restaurant owner in Japan. | In 2013, a 489lb (222kg) bluefin tuna was bought at an auction for £1.05m by a sushi restaurant owner in Japan. |