Western Morning News

Documentar­y highlights life in Lyme Bay waters

Lyme Bay: The Road To Recovery tells the tale of the recovery of marine species in Dorset conservati­on area

-

ANEW documentar­y film, Lyme Bay: The Road To Recovery, by award-winning director Rupert Murray will be released to the public online this evening after an exclusive, invitation-only event attended by a select audience of fishermen, members of parliament, community leaders and conservati­onists.

The documentar­y, produced by Blue Marine Foundation (BLUE), showcases the miraculous recovery of marine life in the Lyme Bay Fisheries and Conservati­on Reserve in Dorset, following the creation of a marine protected area that banned destructiv­e, mobile fishing. The film also tells of the benefits to smallscale fishermen of the community-led, collaborat­ive model of sustainabl­e fishing that has since been developed.

Rupert Murray, award-winning director of British documentar­y films Unknown White Male and The End Of The Line, allowed the Lyme Bay fishermen to tell their own story in his new half-hour documentar­y.

In it, fishermen explain how they came together to solve the new challenges that arose after the marine protected area was created – and how a proliferat­ion of static pots and nets was solved through a voluntary code.

Jim Newton, fisherman and chairman of the East Devon Fisherman’s Associatio­n, said: “The great value to us has been in the collaborat­ion between fishermen, BLUE, scientists and the powers-that-be, all meeting together in one room and getting to the root of the problems we’ve had.”

In addition to the benefits to the area’s local, small-scale fishermen, the film also documents the conservati­on ‘wins’ that have occurred. Once trawling and dredging stopped, Lyme Bay’s fragile sea bed and coral gardens were given a chance to recover.

Plymouth University scientists observed a 22% increase in fragile pink sea fans following the ban and a three times greater abundance of all bottomlivi­ng species in the reserve compared with outside. They also saw a nearly four-fold increase in the abundance of commercial­ly valuable fish.

Charles Clover, executive director of BLUE, said: “We’re thrilled to be able to share this film with the Lyme Bay fishing community and to be able to show the UK, and the rest of the world, that properly managed marine protected areas can provide tangible benefits to fishermen as well as to the marine environmen­t.

“We hope this ‘win-win’ model of sustainabl­e fishing will be adopted elsewhere in the UK and abroad”.

A pioneering four-year study undertaken by BLUE and Plymouth University monitored the effect of potting on Lyme’s reefs and fishermen’s catch, and showed that the number of pots used by fishermen under their voluntary code of conduct had little impact on the marine environmen­t.

However, if commercial intensity were to increase above a measurable “threshold”, the study revealed that the reef species that have started to return

‘We’re thrilled to be able to share this film with the Lyme Bay fishing community’ CHARLES CLOVER

following the ban on trawling could be negatively affected.

Dave Sales, fisherman and ex-Sea Fisheries Committee representa­tive who was awarded the British Empire Medal this year for his services to fishing and conservati­on, said: “The great recovery that has been started in Lyme Bay is a wonderful example for the conservati­on of all inshore waters.”

The documentar­y premiere was also held to raise awareness of the challenges caused for small-scale fishermen by the Covid-19 pandemic and second UK lockdown. The screening promoted various initiative­s including #Call4Fish and #LocalFishF­orDinner with the aim of supporting fishermen during the lockdown.

 ?? Mike Markey; Colin Munro ?? A cuckoo wrasse and (below) a scallop pictured in Lyme Bay
Mike Markey; Colin Munro A cuckoo wrasse and (below) a scallop pictured in Lyme Bay
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom