Offshore Possible SACs
A
possible SAC (pSAC) is a site that has had
Cabinet Committee approval to go to consultation. A site remains a
pSAC until it is submitted to the European Commission. There are
currently eight possible SACs; Hatton Bank, Anton Dohrn
Seamount, East Rockall Bank, Pobie Bank Reef and Solan Bank Reef in
the Scottish offshore region; Pisces Reef Complex and Croker
Carbonate Slabs in the Irish Sea and Wight-Barfleur Reef
in the English Channel. The
consultation for the five pSACs in the Scottish
offshore region began in March 2012 and will run until 25th
May 2012. Pisces Reef Complex, Croker Carbonate Slabs and
Wight-Barfleur Reef were
consulted upon in summer 2011. JNCC are
currently analysing the consultation responses.
Hatton Bank was formally
advised to Government in February 2009 and was recommended for
it's bedrock, stony and cold water coral
reefs. Pobie Bank
Reef, Solan Bank Reef, Anton Dohrn Seamount and East Rockall Bank
were all formally advised to Government in December 2011.
Pobie Bank Reef and
Solan Bank Reef have been
recommended for bedrock and stony
reefs;
Anton Dohrn Seamount and
East Rockall Bank have both
been recommended for bedrock, stony and cold water
coral
reefs.
Pisces Reef Complex and
Wight-Barfleur Reef were formally
advised to Government in January 2011. Both these sites have been
recommended for their
bedrock and stony reefs.
Croker
Carbonate Slabs was formally advised to Government in March
2011 and has been recommended as an example of
submarine structures made by leaking gases.
JNCC provides
advice on the management of Annex I habitats and
Annex II species protected within offshore SACs to
Defra, Scottish Government and other Competent
Authorities. JNCC is not responsible for the management of sites,
or for producing management plans for them. These are the
responsibilities of the Competent Authorities.
There are three downloads associated with each pSAC:
- SAC Selection Assessment Document - Detailing
the scientific justification for the site;
- Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations - Providing, in draft format, guidance to the
Competent Authorities on managing human activities on the
site;
- GIS boundary for the pSAC - Please note that
boundaries for future sites are not fixed until the site has been
submitted to the European Commission. Therefore this site boundary
may change.
Hatton Bank
Hatton Bank is a large volcanic bank in the North-East
Atlantic. The depth of the bank ranges from less than 500 to over
1000 metres. The hard substrates provided by the stony and bedrock
reef on the site support a wide array of species. These include
scleractinian corals, lace corals, black corals, soft corals and
cup corals as well as seafans and sponges. Cold water coral reefs,
made up of Lophelia pertusa and Madrepora
oculata, are also present. Further details of the 2005-2006 Strategic Environmental Assessment
surveys that visited and collected data at Hatton
Bank are also available.
Hatton Bank SAC
Selection Assessment Document (2,256 KB)
Hatton Bank Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (666 KB)
Hatton Bank pSAC boundary
Pobie Bank Reef
Pobie Bank Reef is located in the North Sea, approximately 20km
east of Shetland, Scotland. The site is approximately 70km long and
21km wide with seabed depth ranging from 70m to 100m. The reef is
composed of a combination of stony and bedrock reef and in the
central section of the reef there are very large, rugged bedrock
outcrops. The reef provides a habitat to an extensive community of
encrusting and robust sponges and bryozoans, which are found
throughout the site. This includes encrusting coralline algae, cup
sponges, and bryozoans in the shallower areas; and small erect
sponges, cup corals and brittlestars in the deeper areas. Harbour
porpoise, grey seal and harbour (common) seal are present at Pobie
Bank Reef and are included as non-qualifying features.
Further details of the 2005-2006 Strategic Environmental Assessment
surveys that visited and collected data at Pobie
Bank are also available, as well as the JNCC report
'Foster-Smith, R, Benson,
A and Foster-Smith, J. 2009. Interpretation of Pobie Bank East of
Shetland for Annex I Reef, JNCC Report No.
433'.
Pobie Bank Reef SAC Selection
Assessment Document (592 KB)
Pobie Bank Reef Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (444 KB)
Pobie Bank Reef pSAC boundary
Solan Bank Reef
Solan Bank Reef is located approximately 50km north of Cape
Wrath on the Scottish mainland. The majority of the site lies in
water depths of 60 – 80m. However to the south east of the site an
outcrop of bedrock reef rises to approx 20m below the sea surface
whilst the north of the site extends to >90m water depth. The
reefs are characterised by encrusting fauna, mainly encrusting
bryozoans and in the shallower areas, encrusting coralline algae.
Also present are cup corals, including an as yet unrecognised
species, brittlestars, a range of sponges, bryozoans, hydroids,
soft coral, jewel anemones, foliose red algaes and kelp. Harbour
porpoise, bottlenose dolphin, grey seal and harbour (common) seal
are present at Solan Bank Reef and are included as non-qualifying
features. Further information on the 2008 JNCC survey of Submarine Structures in the
Mid-Irish Sea and Solan Bank is also available.
Solan Bank Reef
SAC Selection Assessment Document (2,375 KB)
Solan Bank Reef Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (409 KB)
Solan Bank Reef pSAC boundary
Anton Dohrn Seamount
Anton Dohrn Seamount is a former volcano located to the west of
Scotland, about 200km from the Outer Hebrides. The top is at 1100m
and is interspersed with features extending to a maximum height of
around 530m below sea level. The seamount is approximately 1800m
high and the steep cliffs extend down to ~ 2400m. The reefs support
assemblages of sea cucumbers, brittlestars, cup corals, sponges,
gorgonians (sea whips or sea fans) and other corals. The cold water
coral Lophelia pertusa forms clumps of reef which occur at
the top of the seamount support a rich assemblage of associated
fauna including other corals, squat lobster and urchins.
Further information on the 2009 JNCC survey of Anton Dohrn Seamount and
East Rockall Bank is also available.
Anton Dohrn
Seamount SAC Selection Assessment Document (2,571 KB)
Anton Dohrn Seamount Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (480 KB)
Anton Dohrn Seamount pSAC boundary
East Rockall Bank
East Rockall Bank is located to the west of Scotland, about
320km west of the Outer Hebrides. It is located along the eastern
flank of Rockall Bank geological feature where the slope descends
steeply down to over 1000m and is cut by two canyons. The stony
reef at the summit supports bryozoans and sponges as well as the
cold water coral Lophelia pertusa which forms clumps of
reef. A rocky ledge of bedrock reef that runs the length of
the eastern flank supports lace corals and sponges whilst the stony
reef found below this further down the slope provides a substrate
for corals and sponges. Further information on the 2009 JNCC survey of Anton Dohrn Seamount and
East Rockall Bank is also available.
East Rockall
Bank SAC Selection Assessment Document (2,130 KB)
East Rockall Bank Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (443 KB)
East Rockall Bank pSAC boundary
Wight-Barfleur Reef
The
Wight-Barfleur reef is an area of bedrock and stony reef located in
the central English Channel, between St Catherine’s point on the
Isle of Wight and Barfleur Point on the Cotentin Peninsula in
northern France. The depth within the SAC ranges from 25m to 100m,
with the deepest areas to the south, and within the palaeovalley
which runs along the south-east part of the SAC. The bedrock and
stony reef areas support a diverse range of reef fauna. There are
many types of sponges present, from encrusting sponges to larger
branching types. Tube worms, anemones and sea squirts are also
common on the large boulders and bedrock.
Wight-Barfleur
Reef SAC Selection Assessment Document (1,003 KB)
Wight-Barfleur Reef Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (382 KB)
Wight-Barfleur Reef pSAC boundary
Croker Carbonate Slabs
The Croker Carbonate Slabs is an area in the
mid-Irish Sea, approximately 30km west of Anglesey, where extensive
areas of the Annex I feature “submarine structures made by leaking
gases” have been identified. The site lies in 70m water depth in
the north descending down to approximately 100m at the south west
corner. The seabed surface is composed of extensive areas of
exposed methane-derived authigenic carbonate (MDAC). The seabed
habitats created by these MDAC structures are distinctive,
supporting a diverse range of marine species that are absent from
the surrounding seabed characterised by coarse sediment.
Areas of ‘high relief’ MDAC support a diverse range of soft corals,
erect filter feeders, sponges, tube worms and anemones whilst the
‘low relief’ MDAC is colonised with scour-resistant hydroids and
bryozoans. Further details of the 2008 JNCC survey to the area are also
available.
Croker Carbonate Slabs
SAC Selection Assessment Document (892 KB)
Croker Carbonate Slabs Draft Conservation Objectives and
Advice on Operations (401 KB)
Croker Carbonate Slabs pSAC boundary
Pisces Reef Complex
The Pisces Reef Complex is located in
the western Irish Sea, in the north-west mud basin. It is
approximately midway between the Isle of Man and the coast of
Northern Ireland. The area consists of an extensive mud plain
through which three areas of Annex I bedrock and boulder reef
protrude, rising 15-35m above the surrounding seabed. The reefs
themselves support a diverse community of brachiopods, ascidians,
hydroids, sponges and fish. The Diphasia alata hydroid
community is present at the site. This community is not currently
included within the Marine Habitat Classification for Britain and
Ireland but is considered rare in the UK. The difference
in species composition and abundance between the reefs and the
surrounding mud plain highlights the importance of the reefs
locally providing a refuge for numerous species. The area of muddy
sediment around the rocky reefs supports a major Nephrops
norvegicus fishery and a high density of Nephrops
burrows has been observed.
Pisces Reef
Complex SAC Selection Assessment Document (1,268 KB)
Pisces
Reef Complex Draft Conservation Objectives and Advice on
Operations (391 KB)
Pisces Reef Complex pSAC boundary