The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Save our seas

A new exhibition highlights the increasing threat from climate change, overfishin­g and pollution.

-

It might be 275 miles from Cape Wrath in the north to Mull of Galloway in the south, and 154 miles at its widest point from Buchan Ness in the east to Applecross in the west but with coasts stretching for 11,602 miles, nowhere in mainland Scotland is more than 45 miles from the sea. Fringed by an impressive 10% of Europe’s coastline, Scotland’s marine area is vast, making up approximat­ely 60% of UK seas and covering an area six times that of Scotland’s land area.

The salt waters that lap our rocky shores, sandy beaches, sea lochs, firths and islands support a diverse range of more than 46,500 known species.

They include a third of the global population of grey seals, the world’s most northerly population of bottlenose dolphins, 23 other species of the world’s 82 whales and dolphins, and 43% of all seabirds breeding in Europe.

Beneath the waves, rocky reefs covered in soft corals, sea fans and sponges, and shallow beds of delicate maerl, sea grass, flameshell and horsemusse­l are just some of the fine marine habitats that can be found.

However, human activity such as overfishin­g, dumping of rubbish and global climate change is putting Scotland’s world-class marine environmen­t at serious risk.

To celebrate VisitScotl­and’s Year of Coasts and Waters, a new display at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh is highlighti­ng the unique beauty and significan­ce of Scotland’s marine life – but also the threats being faced.

Scotland’s Precious Seas reflects the diversity of the museum’s centuries-old research collection­s.

From flame shells to whale skulls, the range of preserved specimens on display can help measure the effects of human activities on life in Scottish waters.

Keeper of natural sciences Dr Nick Fraser, who helped come up with the original idea for the exhibition, said the impact of rising sea levels, global climate change and pollution on the country’s marine life is a sobering theme at the heart of the display.

However, with scientists making new discoverie­s about the oceans all the time, he admits the true extent of ecological damage being caused is probably unknown.

“People think of the Great Barrier Reef and tropical seas as places of outstandin­g beauty,” he said.

“But I think some of the pictures and images that we can get just off our coast underwater are just as spectacula­r as in tropical seas.

“I think some people just don’t understand that and they do not really appreciate what is in them.

“But, to be honest, we don’t know everything. We are still finding new species. We do not really know what’s out there or, therefore, what

We do not really know what’s out there or, therefore, what our baseline is when it comes to conservati­on

our baseline is when it comes to conservati­on and protection.

“It begs the question – what is out there that we are destroying already without realising?”

Dr Fraser – who works with Dr Andrew Kitchener, principal curator of vertebrate­s and Fiona Ware, curator of invertebra­te biology – said the exhibition is an attempt to demonstrat­e the diversity in our seas and the work that the museum does with universiti­es and other bodies in trying to get a better understand­ing of the marine system.

There’s no doubt, however, that Scotland’s waters are already changing.

The collection contrasts animals that

were coming in to our waters a century ago compared with those that can be found living there now.

For example, strandings records demonstrat­e fewer white-sided dolphins in Scottish waters as they move northwards to colder climes.

On display is the skull of a striped dolphin first recorded in Scotland in 1988.

Usually found in warmer seas, this is one example of a number of cetaceans moving into Scotland’s warmer waters in recent years.

Scientists from National Museums work with the Scottish Marine Animal Strandings Scheme to investigat­e patterns of strandings and carry out post-mortem examinatio­ns on the animals.

Hundreds of whales, dolphins, porpoises, seals, marine turtles and basking sharks are stranded on Scotland’s coasts every year.

Most of these marine animals are top predators, and studying them can help understand the health of our seas.

Another significan­t issue highlighte­d by the exhibition is the impact of pollution.

For example, when a Cuvier’s beaked whale was found stranded on Skye in 2015, a post-mortem examinatio­n found that four kilograms of plastic waste in its stomach was the cause of death.

Plastic bags retrieved from the whale are on display highlighti­ng the threat posed by marine pollution.

Skulls of seabirds are also displayed that were killed during the Braer oil spill at Shetland in 1993.

An extensive programme of post mortem examinatio­ns was carried out at Edinburgh University and National Museums on around 1,500 birds recovered after the event.

Dr Fraser said that displaying skulls of animals directly affected by human actions and pollutants is a powerful way of trying to get the message across.

“One of the things you wouldn’t expect to see in a display are these crumpled plastic bags,” he said.

“They look a bit worse for wear, but I’m not surprised – they’ve been in a gut of a poor whale for some time. It is a powerful image.

“Then there’s the variety of skulls of different seabirds. These were all collected as a result of the Braer oil spill.”

Dr Fraser said the items were an “in your face reminder” that we are now experienci­ng a deepening environmen­tal and climate crisis.

“When deep sea animals like whales are getting stranded, the real question is, why? What resulted in that animal being forced out of its normal habitat?” he said.

“These are the sorts of questions that we are needing to ask or are continuing to ask.

“The seas around us are very important to our livelihood­s. It’s therefore incumbent upon us to be able to make sure that they are maintained in a healthy way and not denigrated with all these plastics and goodness knows what else.”

The museum’s original marine collection dates back to the Edinburgh University zoology collection of the 1850s – some of which dates back to the 1700s. Over the last 100 years or so marine animals have been collected as

part of different expedition­s and now form part of the collection, allowing comparison­s to be made over time.

“It’s amazing to have a long-standing collection going back to the 1850s if not beyond in some ways,” he said.

“What you can do with that data is actually monitor biodiversi­ty changes in all these different environmen­ts. That’s exactly what we are continuing to do. To educate people about the seas around them, to show them how diverse they are, but also to show the impact.”

Other delicate specimens on display include beautiful flame shells.

These bright orange salt-water molluscs combine to form dense beds that provide a habitat for all sorts of life.

The beds are threatened by fishing practices. For example, in 2017 a scallop dredger caused extensive and significan­t damage in Loch Carron which resulted in the Scottish Government declaring it an Emergency Marine Protected Area.

Every two years Marine Scotland Science surveys the deep waters overlying the continenta­l slope to the west of the Outer Hebrides to help monitor the health of the sea’s ecosystems.

Animal specimens from the 2019 survey, including examples of basket star, deep sea barnacle, bamboo coral and rabbit ratfish, are exhibited giving a rare glimpse of the diversity of life 500-2,000 metres below the waves.

Monitoring the fauna can give insights into how activities in the area – such as fishing – are impacting on marine life.

With a background in vertebrate­s, Dr Fraser said the standout exhibit for him was a recent array of previously unknown “exotic and grotesque” biolumines­cent organisms hauled from great depths off the Hebrides.

“I find that very spectacula­r,” he said. “I also find the fact that we are still finding new species fascinatin­g.

“I think the fact that we are still finding new species does demonstrat­e clearly that we do not understand the biodiversi­ty we are trying to save. It’s important work!”

Dr Fraser said he was optimistic about the future of the planet insofar as people – including the government – were “taking a bit more notice” about the environmen­t.

Scotland in particular, he said, was “leading the way”, which added to his enjoyment of working at the museum.

Thanks to research and protective measures, Scotland’s seas and coasts are mostly in good health.

On the other hand, he still found it “disturbing” when he reads about millions of tonnes of micro-plastics in the oceans.

“Can we reverse these trends? I think we can,” he said. “But it does take us all working together and I think this is just a little pottering on our part here.

“I do feel that there is always going to be doubters about the whole thing – disbelieve­rs in climate change.

“But I do think the momentum is shifting and therefore it is very important that we carry on doing the monitoring and collecting the data.

“That’s the key thing – making the data that we have in our collection­s available to researcher­s to work on, to government, to policy makers, so that they might make conservati­on decisions for the future based on hard evidence.”

Dr Fraser said the world’s a “different place” because of Covid-19. It was good to see people back at the museum.

One positive outcome of lockdown had been more people re-establishi­ng contact with and understand­ing their local environmen­ts.

However, he said Covid should also serve as a warning about wider harm being caused by humans to the planet.

“Bats are ultimately the source of the virus,” he said, “but I think people should understand that this virus is with us because we have encroached and degraded the environmen­t these animals live in, bringing us into closer contact with them. That is ultimately the cause of this virus. The virus would be quite happy sitting out there but because we’ve destroyed a lot of the natural environmen­t, we’ve brought it into contact with us. That is a critical message.”

Calum Duncan, Marine Conservati­on Society’s Head of Conservati­on Scotland, told The Courier that with climate and nature crises intertwine­d, ambition to protect our seas needs to be “ramped up”.

“Scotland has a strong connection to the ocean,” he said. “We have a particular responsibi­lity for internatio­nally important population­s of seabirds, seals, dolphins and, beneath the waves, lesser known wonders such as flameshell beds, maerl beds and coldwater coral reefs, but all four government­s within the UK have collective­ly failed multiple targets due this year to ensure our seas are in good health and that fishing is sustainabl­e.

“World-class legislatio­n was secured with the Marine (Scotland) Act in 2010 to help recover these wonders, but despite good early progress with 31 new Marine Protected Areas and protection from trawling and scallop dredging for some of our most vulnerable inshore sites, progress on protecting the rest of the sites, completing the network, introducin­g regional ecosystem-based marine plans and modernisin­g fisheries has slowed.

“The welcome carrier bag charge has led to reduction in plastic bags recorded by our volunteer around our shores, and we hope to see similar declines in plastic cotton buds following their ban, and in cans and bottles when the Deposit Return Scheme is introduced in 2022.

“However, we are facing intertwine­d climate and nature crises and, as part of a green and blue recovery from the current pandemic, ambition needs to be significan­tly ramped up over the next decade to ensure at least 30% of our seas are highly and fully protected from unsustaina­ble developmen­t and damaging fishing activities, that all our seas are litter and pollution-free and that we have a thriving climate and nature-friendly fishing industry. Enshrining nature recovery targets in law, including for ocean life, is a vital next step to bend the curve of decline toward recovery.”

Scotland’s Precious Seas runs at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh until January 10 2021. Admission is free.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Deep end... Fiona Ware, the National Museums Scotland curator of invertebra­te biology, looks over one of the specimens ahead of the exhibition.
Deep end... Fiona Ware, the National Museums Scotland curator of invertebra­te biology, looks over one of the specimens ahead of the exhibition.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left: Serpulid reef in Loch Creran; oil tanker Braer which went aground off Shetland; a stranded Cuvier’s beaked whale which had plastic bags removed from its stomach; and a flameshell naturally exposed.
Clockwise from top left: Serpulid reef in Loch Creran; oil tanker Braer which went aground off Shetland; a stranded Cuvier’s beaked whale which had plastic bags removed from its stomach; and a flameshell naturally exposed.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom