The Chronicle (UK)

Areas off region’s coast shortliste­d for higher level of protected status

- By DANIEL HALL Reporter daniel.hall01@reachplc.com

TWO areas off the Northumber­land Coast have been shortliste­d to become Highly Protected Marine Areas (HPMAS), meaning all fishing would be banned within them in order to rewild the seas.

The islands of Lindisfarn­e and Farnes Deep are two of five areas across the UK which have been proposed for an HPMA. The first step has been taken towards the designatio­n of the first of such areas, with Defra announcing a 12-week consultati­on to gather opinions on the sites.

According to Defra, HPMAS are areas of the sea that allow the protection and recovery of marine ecosystems by prohibitin­g extractive, destructiv­e and deposition­al uses and allowing only non-damaging levels of other activities to the extent permitted by internatio­nal law. It is hoped that the designatio­n of HPMAS will allow nature to recover to a more natural state and allow ecosystems to thrive, and act as a natural solution to help store

carbon and tackle climate change, as well as generating benefits through tourism, recreation and marine education. Lindisfarn­e’s salt marsh, beaches, cliffs dunes and islands support breeding colonies of seabirds and seals.

Farnes Deep has a sand and gravel seabed which is home to animals such as sea pen anemones, worms, molluscs and fish, while dolphins, whales and harbour porpoises use the wider region. Both areas are already

Marine Protected Areas, but the new designatio­n will give them a higher level of protection.

Patrick Norris, chairman of the Northumber­land Coast AONB welcomed the possibilit­y of the potential designatio­ns, saying: “If it takes that inclusive approach that looks at the impact of people who make their livings from fishing or who make their livings from leisure and tourism, it could underline all the ecological benefits which a managed

approach will take.” An HPMA would mean that no fishing would be allowed within its limits, with the consultati­on taking the effects of such sites on sea users and coastal communitie­s into account before any decision is made.

Patrick continued: “Brexit has had an ‘interestin­g’ effect on fishing and they won’t want anything to make it worse. But this consultati­on is a key part of the process, so I’ll look forward to the outcome.” Mike Pratt, CEO of

Northumber­land Wildlife Trust, said: “If all goes to plan, it will be great news for the wildlife living in the North Sea and elsewhere in the UK.

“Marine protection is an issue which matters to anyone who has ever spent happy afternoons exploring rock pools or been enchanted by chance encounters with dolphins, whales or one of the many other captivatin­g species we enjoy in our waters.

“However, continued destructio­n has reduced them to a shadow of their former selves, so it is vital that our marine ecosystem is protected.”

While the consultati­on has been opened by DEFRA, nothing has been decided yet. Patrick said: “There are a whole raft of places that have been suggested for an HPMA but whether they’ll make the final cut I don’t know. I would have thought Northumber­land would be pretty high up the list because of its wildlife, ecology and everything in the sea.”

Other sites suggested are Allonby Bay in Cumbria and Dolphin Head in the English Channel.

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