Britain's Marine Species Need Legal Protection, WWF Warns
Posted on: Monday, 8 October 2007, 09:00 CDT
By Sadie Gray
Britain's most cherished underwater habitats, and the creatures that thrive in them, face imminent destruction if the Government does not provide them with legal protection.
Species including seahorses, basking sharks, turtles and corals are at risk from human-led activities such as dredging for sand and gravel, unregulated fishing and the use of jet-skis and motor boats, a leading conservation organisation warns today.
Some of the most ecologically sensitive locations in the country, such as Lyme Bay, Dogger Bank and the coral reefs off the Scottish coast, could be lost for ever, the WWF believes.
The Government, which promised before the 2005 election to introduce a marine bill guaranteeing underwater zones protection, has come no closer to passing the law than Defra's publication of a White Paper in March.
In a report titled Can We Have the Bill Please?, WWF-UK is demanding that the Bill should go ugently before MPs, claiming that unregulated activities including anchoring, unlicensed dredging, commercial fishing and bottom trawling are destroying fragile underwater habitats.
Jan Brown, WWF's senior marine policy officer, said: "Our seas have been in decline for some time and it is imperative that the Government addresses the urgency of the situation.
"The facts are inescapable - many nationally important species and habitats are at risk. It is imperative that we have over- arching marine legislation to prevent further deterioration and decline."
A Defra spokeswoman said: "We are committed to a marine Bill in this parliament. The intention is to publish a Bill in the next session, which will probably be early 2008."
Letters, Page 38
Areas at risk
--Stanton Banks
Earmarked as one of eight special areas of conservation under the Marine Bill white paper, this is an area of rock peaks in the Malin Sea, on the continental shelf west of Scotland. Species
include sea urchins, barnacles, brittlestars and coralline red algae.
Twenty-one species of cetaceans - whales, dolphins and porpoises - have been recorded.
--Dogger Bank
Also a possible marine conservation area (MCA), this submerged North Sea sandbank 70 miles off the Yorkshire coast supports a magnificently diverse
community of worms - and is an important spawning ground for fish and
dolphins.
--Lyme Bay
Not a candidate for MCA status but could gain special protection for its reefs, which are home to at least 300 species. These include vast fields of pink sea fan coral and starfish, which marine experts say have been damaged by heavy dredging for scallops.
Source: Independent, The; London (UK)
Related Articles
- Customer and Partner Ecosystem Thrives With SAP(R) BusinessObjects(TM) Governance, Risk, and Compliance Solutions
- SAP and Novell Expand Global Partnership to Help Customers Deliver Confident Business and IT Governance, Risk and Compliance Programs
- CDR Launches Government Risk Index To Track Credit Risk of Sovereign Debt
- eFortresses, Inc. Launches New Governance, Risk and Compliance (GRC) Practice Using Groundbreaking Methodology
- Ferry Operators Says Tough-on-Drugs Conservative Government Must Act Now
- Conservative Government Would Sue Aboriginal Protesters: Tory
- Compassoft Hires Leifur Thordarson As Vice President, Alliances to Drive Governance, Risk and Compliance Programs
- Conservative Government Announces Consultation on Open-Skies Policy
- Canada wakes up to new Conservative government
- Canadians elect weak Conservative government
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds