Farmed salmon have been found in Lough Corrib which are believed to have escaped from a cage off Killary fjord last month.
As The Irish Times reports, Lough Corrib is a special area of conservation and the west of Ireland’s largest wild fishery.
The fish escaped in mid-August while work was being carried out at the farm at Rosroe, Renvyle in rough weather.
A tear in a cage net was confirmed by divers, and the company claimed the number of fish which escaped was “insignificant”.
Inland Fisheries Ireland (IFI), which is currently working to try and recapture some of the fish, was not informed within the mandatory 24-hour period.
IFI says it has been liaising with local fishery owners and fishers to identify and take samples of any escaped farmed fish encountered, for verification and analysis.
Its teams are also monitoring for, and removing, any escaped fish intercepted at research trapping facilities in the National Salmonid Index Catchment, River Erriff.
However, it said that identification of farmed fish was proving “challenging, as there are no clear markers to identify farmed fish from wild”.
The license previously issued to Killary Salmon Farm Co was assigned to Docon Ltd, Mulrany, Co Mayo, last October.
Galway Bay Against Salmon Cages (GBASC) claims the escape numbered between 10,000 and 30,000 fish.
The Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine and Inland Fisheries Ireland is preparing a report on the incident.
Read The Irish Times here

















































