The Herald

Ocean campaigner­s call for ban on fishing gear they say damages sea beds in protected areas

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AN ocean conservati­on group is calling on the Scottish Government to ban bottom-towed fishing gear in the country’s marine protected areas (MPAS).

Oceana says all but two of Scotland’s 24 offshore benthic (ocean bottom) MPAS were damaged by the practice during more than 44,000 fishing hours recorded last year.

The group says its analysis also suggests about 300 large bottom-trawlers and dredgers “plough Scotland’s protected seabed on a near-daily basis”.

Only the deep-sea Hatton-rockall Basin and Hatton Bank MPAS, far off the west coast, were not bottom-trawled.

The data indicates Scotland’s 69 inshore MPAS were intensely disturbed – including at south Arran, which is designated to protect ocean quahog, kelp and seagrass beds, maerl beds and burrowing bivalves.

Oceana recorded 2,295

fishing hours there compared to the Moray Firth, with its important sandbanks and bottlenose dolphins, where 880 fishing hours were recorded.

Melissa Moore, head of UK policy at Oceana, said: “We are calling on Scottish ministers to take urgent action to ban bottom-towed fishing gear in all of Scotland’s MPAS and reinstate the three nautical

mile inshore trawl and dredge ban.

“As well as being destructiv­e, continued licensing of this activity is illegal under marine wildlife laws.

“Scotland needs to step up and protect its rich and diverse marine life.

“These damaging fishing methods also have a devastatin­g impact on blue carbon habitats and ruin the fishing grounds of low-impact fishermen such as creelers.”

Willie Mackenzie, an oceans consultant for Greenpeace UK, said: “Bottom trawlers, which rip up the seabed, have no place in any protected areas at sea.

“It’s ridiculous that the UK’S government­s say they have protected vast swathes of seabed, when they still allow bottom trawlers to plough them with alarming regularity.

“We hope Scotland’s government recognises the severity of the climate and nature emergency we’re facing, shows leadership, and bans bottom trawlers from all of Scotland’s protected areas.

“This will safeguard biodiversi­ty, and ensure vast stores of blue carbon remain safely in the deep oceans.”

Earlier this week, an alliance of more than 100 organisati­ons demanded trawlers be banned from fishing within three miles of Scotland’s coasts.

 ??  ?? Campaigner­s say the gear damages marine habitats
Campaigner­s say the gear damages marine habitats

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