Spanish coastguards rescued 124 migrants, including young children and a person needing a wheelchair, from two wooden boats in the seas off the Canary Islands on Thursday.
One boat carrying 66 people was located 10 nautical miles south of Gran Canaria, Spain's Red Cross said. The second, carrying 58 people including two women, was found nearby.
The EU border agency Frontex says the Atlantic route to the Canary Islands is currently the busiest route for irregular migration from West Africa into the European Union.
The number of people making the perilous journey between January 1 and March 15, reached 12,393, compared with 2,178 during the same period last year, Spain's Interior Ministry said this month.
The island group is around 100 miles (160 km) from West Africa at the closest point. All the migrants were taken to Gran Canaria.

Trump sees swift end to war as Iran reviews US peace proposal
Israeli strikes kill five, injure son of Hamas chief in Gaza
Israel strikes Beirut for first time since ceasefire
US and Iran closing in on memorandum to end war, sources say
Trump defends higher ballroom costs, targets less than $400 million
