Two crucial years to help save our seas

13 Dec 2018

From the air we breathe to the food we eat, Scotland needs seas full of life. Yet they are struggling. With the tide of ocean plastics awareness, resistance to mechanically stripping pristine kelp forests, community monitoring of scallop dredge damage in Loch Carron, Firth of Lorn and Loch Gairloch and a growing consensus for overhauling aquaculture, more and more people realise this.

Scotland’s seas are home to thousands of species, including commercially important fish and shellfish and charismatic whales, dolphins, seals, seabirds and basking sharks, all supporting livelihoods and coastal communities. Seagrass meadows, kelp forests, cold water coral reefs, rich burrowed sediments, maerl, flameshell, native oyster and horsemussel beds are the engine-room, also storing carbon that would otherwise contribute to climate change. Our seas also provide much needed space to relax, explore and exercise, to swim, snorkel, dive, sail and walk beside.

However, they need help. Climate change, overfishing, unsustainable development, invasive species, noise and litter are pushing them beyond environmental limits. Over the last decade many thousands across Scotland, coastal communities, industry and environment groups alike, have called for better. The watershed Marine (Scotland) Act 2010 overhauled an outdated licensing system and enshrined duties to protect and enhance Scotland’s seas, deliver sustainable development, mitigate and adapt to climate change and establish a National Marine Plan and Marine Protected Area (MPA) network. In 2014, 30 new nature conservation MPAs were created, in 2016 fisheries protection measures introduced in the 16 most vulnerable inshore sites and a large Harbour Porpoise site submitted to EU and in 2017 the Loch Carron emergency MPA established and a Government commitment to scoping a deepwater marine reserve made. In a northeast Atlantic context Scotland is therefore ahead of the curve and must be recognised as such, but progress has slowed. Consultation on fisheries measures for a further 17 inshore sites is expected early next year and measures for 18 offshore sites long-submitted by the Scottish Government still await formal EU approval. Many therefore remain at risk of being “paper parks”.

Known gaps in Scotland’s MPA network also exist, including for marine birds, whales, dolphins and basking sharks, as well as for white-beaked dolphins, spiny lobsters and additional sites for the critically endangered common skate. In January 2018, a Budget deal was secured to ensure four much-needed MPAs would be consulted on, now postponed until early 2019. Whatever the timescale, key to success will be ensuring sites are protected, concerns over which have been raised with reported incursions of scallop dredgers into protected sites, and effective monitoring of seabed health to gauge if measures are working and recovery happening. The Scottish Government is due to report on Scotland’s MPA network to Parliament by the end of the month.

Recovery beyond MPAs is also needed and here the National Marine Plan is crucial. In April 2017, scallop dredging damage to Loch Carron flameshell beds activated a general policy requiring that the national status of Priority Marine features (PMFs) must not be significantly impacted. An emergency MPA, containing what is possibly the world’s largest flameshell bed, was subsequently established and the Scottish Government committed to improve protection for 11 PMFS at greatest risk from fishing outside MPAs, with a consultation due next year. The National Marine Plan also guides regional marine planning, an important mechanism for inshore recovery, and 11 marine regions have been identified. However, only Shetland and the Firth of Clyde are actively developing draft plans, with Orkney anticipated next.

Loch Carron also underlined the recognised need to modernise inshore fishing, with comprehensive vessel monitoring and traceability key to consumer confidence. As pressure from other industries such as aquaculture and marine tourism also grows, the need for a precautionary and ecosystem-based approach to use and enjoy our seas within environmental limits has never been greater.

During this Year of Young People, a survey recorded that 11 to 26 year olds thought our seas should be protected but that more effort was needed. Announcing the results at the Sea Scotland 2018 conference, Jack Dudgeon, Vice Chair and Member of the Scottish Youth Parliament, reminded us that young people care about the environment and that they will live with the implications of today’s decisions for the longest time. As we approach the end of 2018 and near 2020, a target ‘super’ year for many important international commitments, all opportunities to boost the health of Scotland’s seas must be grasped for the benefit of current and future generations.

Calum Duncan
Head of Conservation Scotland, Marine Conservation Society
Convener, Scottish Environment LINK’s Marine Group

This blog was published in The Scotsman here on 12 December

Share this post

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.

Close