2014 Consultation on the Management of Inshore Special Areas of Conservation and Marine Protected Areas Overview

2014 Consultation on the Management of Inshore Special Areas of Conservation and Marine Protected Areas Overview document.


Protected Area C - Loch Laxford SAC

Loch Laxford is an excellent example of a large shallow inlet and bay on the North West coast of mainland Scotland. The region is characterised by rocky coasts and full salinity, low turbidity waters.

The site contains a wide variety of marine habitats and communities resulting from a range of environmental conditions. These include exposed reefs at the western loch mouth to sheltered reefs and a variety of sediment habitats in the inner bay. Steep and vertical bedrock reef slopes extend along the whole length of the Loch Laxford on the southern side of the deep main channel. On the northern side there is both bedrock and boulder slopes forming the reef habitat, this also occurs at exposed sites around the islands and skerries at the entrance to Loch Dùghaill.

The majority of the seabed consists of clean, coarse sediments in the outer reaches of the loch and muddy sediments in the middle and inner reaches. Maerl beds are located in the area between the head of Ardmore Point and Glas Leac and on the other side of the loch off the north side of Sgeir losal. At the head of the loch in Laxford Bay there are areas of the free-floating knotted wrack Ascophyllum nodosum ecad mackaii.

The coastal waters support a wide range of marine communities, essentially boreal in character, which reflect the range of available substrata, the variation in exposure to wave action and tidal currents, and the influence of the warm waters of the Gulf Stream. The loch has a complex fjardic shape with numerous small islands and side branches that include two subsidiary lochs, Lochs Dùghaill and a' Chadh-Fi on the north side.

The entrance to the loch system faces northwest into the Minch with the outermost part of the loch very exposed. However, the entrance is relatively narrow and the many reefs and islands near it combine to reduce wave action, such that most of the loch is sheltered. The central channel is relatively straight but the coastline is long and convoluted. The main loch has two basins and a single, broad sill across the entrance. The smaller outer basin reaches a depth of 67m whilst the rest of the loch is relatively shallow, less than 30m.

Summary of the approach to management

The use of demersal trawls, mechanical dredge, or suction dredges (boat or diver operated) would be prohibited throughout the SAC.

Further information

See the Protected Area C section in the following documents;

Approaches
Maps
Pictures

See questions 8 - 9

Contact

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