The Scotsman

Anger over reports of illegal scallop dredging

- By MOIRA KERR

An investigat­ion has been launched by Marine Scotland after reports of suspected illegal scallop dredging in the protected waters of the Firth of Lorn.

The move comes as pressure mounts on the Scottish Government to stop the destructio­n of the seabed from illegal fishing, amid concerns that dredging is on the increase.

David Ainsley, 61, a diver from the Isle of Seil, told a recent meeting of “concerned parties” in Oban that he took video footage and photos of a boat, complete with dredging gear, in the Firth of Lorn on 18 and 19 November.

Mr Ainsley, a wildlife boat tour operator who has been diving in Scottish waters since 1976, said: “The Firth of Lorn is a special area of conservati­on, it has been closed to scallop dredging for 12 years and the life on the seabed has recovered dramatical­ly. Tthere are more fish there now and an Mscstudyha­sshownthat­porpoise numbers have increased by 286 per cent in ten years. It’s one of the best protected areas in Scotland.

“On the night of 18 November 18 and 19 November we photograph­ed a boat moving slowly and erraticall­y at the Garvellach­s on grounds that we know to be scallop grounds. Our suspicion was that it was dredging.”

Mr Ainsley contacted Marine Scotland to report the incident and inspectors took evidence and examined the area where the boat was seen. He said: “Divers have found, in three separate dives, recently dredged ground. We started the dive on a terraced bed rock slope which I have dived in the past and the turf on that rocky reef was full of silt when it hadn’t been in the past.

“We came on to dredged ground, you can see gouges in the seabed in a line, with very little left alive, you could see deeper grooves, where the dredges had dug in. We have been diving around here for many, many years and it’s pretty easy to know dredged ground.”

He added: “We know that boats have been dredging, we know it’s happening and it must stop because areas that are supposed to be protected are just gradually being ruined. Only 5 per cent of Scottish waters are protected from scallop dredging, there needs to be more determinat­ion to stop illegal fishing.”

Nick Underdown, a spokesman for Openseas, a group which is campaignin­g for sustainabl­e management of marine resources in Scotland, said fishing and community representa­tives had joined with environmen­tal organisati­ons to voice concern at the meeting in Oban. He said: “Communitie­s around Scotland are very unhappy with the inadequaci­es of the Scottish Government to stop illegal scallop dredging.”

Alistair Sinclair, of the Scottish Creel Fishermen’s Assocation, said: “We are very aware of the situatuion and it’s bitterly disappoint­ing.”

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