Identification

Title

Species point records from 1990 UMBSM North & South Uist and Benbecula sealochs survey

Abstract

The Uist island chain in the Outer Hebrides is formed of Lewisian gneiss and is generaly low-lying with extensive and complex fresh and brackish water systems and a heavily indented eastern coastline. Five sealochs on the east coast, Lochs Boisdale, Skipport, Uiskevagh, Eport and Maddy, were surveyed during 1990 as part of the survey of Scottish sealochs. These were selected as being representative of the lochs present in the islands and share three major features. Facing east, they all have a limited exposure gradient. None is deep although Lochs Skipport and Maddy reach 40m in their entrances. Finally, as fiardic systems of varying degrees of complexity, they possess numerous islands and wide shallow basins in their upper reaches, connected to each other and to the main loch by narrow, often intertidal, channels with strong tidal streams. Several of these basins are brackish, Loch Obisary being a classic example; most are extremely sheltered. This combination of features means that the lochs possess a wide variety of habitats. Shellfish and salmon farms are established in all of the lochs surveyed and Ascophyllum nodosum is harvested from the shores for the alginate industry. Loch Maddy is an MCA and a part of the loch is included in the Loch an Duin SSSI. Loch Obisary, which is connected to Loch Eport by a sill 4 m above chart datum, is an SSSI and there are several others in the area. A considerable amount of survey work has been carried out in the Uists since McIntosh (1866) visited the islands, with notable littoral studies by Lewis (1957) and Powell et al. (1979) and several NCC-commissioned sublittoral surveys. Seventy sites were surveyed in total of which 62 were sublittoral and 8 littoral; 34 habitat/community typse were described. The distribution of these within each loch was broadly the same. The lochs were characterized by a variety of shallow sheltered habitats and communities, many of which were subject to tidal streams. There is a full transition from fresh and brackish to marine communities in these systems; only the marine component was investigated during this survey. Infralittoral bedrock communities ranged from rich Laminaria hyperborea forest at the entrances to cape-form L. saccharina forest in the most sheltered regions; the latter was unusually diverse. Deep bedrock, with Swiftia pallida and Diazona violacea, was restricted to the loch entrances. Sheltered circalittoral boulders were rare and were dominated by ascidians. The tide-swept Loch Eport entrance channel held a rich hydroid community not found elsewhere in the area. Sublittoral sediments varied from sandy mud with Virgularia mirabilis in the more seaward sections of the lochs to very soft, flocculent mud with dense populations of the rare holothurian Labidoplax media in the more sheltered basins. Tidal streasms of varying strengths flowed through shallow channels which had a corresponding range of communities from coarse sediments and maerl with Neopentadactyla mixta and Sabella pavonina to scoured bedrock. Particularly unusual were channels in upper Loch Maddy which supported extremely large laminarians and Halidrys siliquosa with a very rich sponge epiphyte community. Little littoral sediment was found, with most shores being bedrock or boulder and dominated by dense blankets of Ascophyllum nodosum. In the areas of strong tidal flow, rich under-boulder shore communities were found, characterised by ascidians and sponges. More exposed shores in the entrances supported barnacle and red algal communities with scattered fucoids. Eleven habitat/community types and 13 species have been provisionally assessed to be of Local, Regional, National or International importance. Records currently considered sensitive have been removed from this dataset.

Resource type

dataset

Resource locator

http://data.jncc.gov.uk/data/896655a0-95db-4cf0-9663-ceaf7b14c89d-1990-UMBSM-North-South-Uist-and-Benbecula-sealochs-survey.csv

name: 1990-UMBSM-North-South-Uist-and-Benbecula-sealochs-survey.csv

Unique resource identifier

code

896655a0-95db-4cf0-9663-ceaf7b14c89d

codeSpace

Dataset language

eng

Spatial reference system

code identifying the spatial reference system

Additional information source

Howson (1991) Surveys of Scottish sealochs. The sealochs of North and South Uist and Benbecula Lewis (1954) The ecology of exposed rocky shores of Caithness. Rendall (1990) Biological survey of the beach and seabed around the Galloway Creamery outfall, Loch Ryan, 1989 Powell, Holme, Knight, Harvey (1978) Survey of the littoral zone of the coast of Great Britain: Report of the shores of Devon and Cornwall.

Classification of spatial data and services

Topic category

oceans

Keywords

Keyword set

keyword value

Marine

Marine Recorder

JNCCMNCR10000029

MNCR

Species

Geographic location

West bounding longitude

-7.356746737

East bounding longitude

-7.081518036

North bounding latitude

57.6535636

South bounding latitude

57.12921909

Temporal reference

Temporal extent

Begin position

1990-05-01

End position

1990-05-09

Dataset reference date

date type

publication

effective date

2007-05-14

Frequency of update

Quality and validity

Lineage

This survey was extracted from a Marine Recorder snapshot.

Conformity

Data format

name of format

Comma Separated Values

version of format

Unknown

Constraints related to access and use

Constraint set

Use constraints

Open Government Licence v3.0

Limitations on public access

no limitations

Responsible organisations

Responsible party

organisation name

Digital and Data Solutions, JNCC

email address

data@jncc.gov.uk

responsible party role

custodian

Metadata on metadata

Metadata point of contact

organisation name

Digital and Data Solutions, JNCC

email address

data@jncc.gov.uk

responsible party role

pointOfContact

Metadata date

2018-05-17

Metadata language

eng