Dogger Bank is about more than shipping forecasts: it shows how we can rewild our seas | Charles Clover
As of today, trawling is banned in the British part of the famous sunken landmass – a major win for biodiversity
A huge ecological experiment begins today on Dogger Bank, part of the sunken landmass that once formed a bridge between Britain and mainland Europe. Trawling and dredging – fishing activities that not only scoop up fish and shellfish but also plough through plants and animals on the sea floor – are now banned, at least on the British part of this Atlantis of the North Sea.
The protection of 12,000 sq km of seabed, 100km off eastern England, where early man hunted woolly mammoths, amounts to an act of rewilding thousands of times bigger than the “best in show” garden at this year’s Chelsea flower show. Covering an area almost the size of Northern Ireland, it marks a turning point in the health of our nearby seas.
Continue reading...from The Guardian https://ift.tt/qoLc2HE
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