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ARCHIVED - 35-kilogram red sunfish found dead on Calblanque beach
The fish was nearly one and a half metres long
A red sunfish weighing 35 kilos and 1.45 meters in length has been found dead this weekend washed up on a beach in the Regional Park of Calblanque, Monte de las Cenizas and Peña del Águila.
This species, called 'lampris guttatus', lives in deeper waters and is the the only fish considered to be warm-blooded, as it is capable of keeping all its organs at a stable temperature. It was first listed by Danish zoologist Morten Thrane Brünnich in 1788.
Its presence is very common in tropical to temperate waters of most oceans, although it is very rarely sighted by visitors as it tends to stay in deeper waters. Occasionally it is sighted close to the shore in the warmer waters and frequently provokes a reaction of fear due to its size and the fact that its dorsal fin sticks up in the air, so it is often mistaken for a shark, although it is immediately obvious that it is not a shark when seen close up. There are very rarely reports of these sunfish encountered by bathers, although this sumemr there was a very upsetting incident in neighbouring Almeria when a chiringuito owner waded into the water, pulled out an unfortunate sunfish splashing around close to the beach and killed it as it was frightening away clients from his beach bar!
Although the incident caused outrage on social media, he was eventually not prosecuted as it is not a criminal offence to kill this fish.