Named after its geology and best known for the dramatic sweep of its scenery, Northern Ireland’s Causeway coast has now earned a new accolade, as the UK’s favourite place for wildlife.

Named after its geology and best known for the dramatic sweep of its scenery, Northern Ireland’s Causeway coast has now earned a new accolade, as the UK’s favourite place for wildlife.

The coastline, which runs along the north-east of Ireland from Lough Foyle to the Glens of Antrim, was voted the nation’s favourite in a poll by BBC Wildlife magazine, beating the Isles of Scilly in fourth place, Scaur Glen in Dumfries and Galloway in third and, in an unexpected second place, Wimbledon Common in London.

Tara Shine, an environmental scientist who nominated the coastline, said it was a “place of outstanding natural beauty, with wild dunes, sheer cliffs and, of course, the magnificent rock formations of the Giant’s Causeway”.


As a student at the nearby University of Ulster, she had enjoyed spotting whales, dolphins, seals and basking sharks on the coastline, she said, adding: “I spent some of my most memorable days near, in and under the water here, catching waves off the sandy beach at Portrush, snorkelling with curious grey seals, and scuba diving off the Skerries and below the dramatic cliffs of Rathlin Island, where I glided over stony reefs with dogfish and among shipwrecks with conger eels.”


To mark its 60th birthday earlier this year, the magazine asked 60 conservationists, writers, presenters and photographers to nominate their favourite UK nature destination, which were voted on by 5,000 participants on its website. Views on the 10 most popular destinations were then canvassed among 2,000 people by YouGov to arrive at the overall winner.

One local person, Richard Lafferty, whose company Aquaholics runs diving training and wildlife boat tours from Portstewart, said he wasn’t surprised. “The waters off the north coast here are very rich in marine life because we have quite strong tidal currents and our waters are full of plankton. It feeds the soft corals and the sponges underwater, which bring in the small fish, the birds and the bigger predators like our dolphins, porpoises, whales and basking sharks.”

Visitors were often surprised by the abundance of wildlife in the deep, warm Atlantic waters, said Lafferty. “For years, we’ve been taking people out [who say], ‘We’ll learn to scuba dive here so when we go abroad, we can do it.’ And then they come back to us after being abroad and they say, ‘We saw more marine life here.’” Of four trips on Tuesday, three included dolphin sightings, he said, while guests on one trip this week spotted six minke whales.


Several stretches of the coastline are owned by the National Trust, which said it was “delighted to be one of the custodians who help encourage wildlife along the Causeway coast”.

The Giant’s Causeway itself is the home of “some very special species, including the pygmy sorrel moth, one of the world’s smallest moths; the northern colletes bee and the black-tailed skimmer dragonfly, as well as the narrow-mouthed whorl snail,” said the trust, adding that stromatolites – stony structures built by colonies of bacteria that it called “one of the earliest known life forms on Earth” – were another surprise find at the Unesco world heritage site.


In a statement, Tourism Northern Ireland said the coastline had “long been recognised as one of the most stunning coastal routes in the world”, and it was “no surprise” that it had also been recognised for its wildlife.

“Among the jagged hills and wave-crashed cliffs, there is an abundance of wildlife in their natural habitat along the route for visitors to enjoy,” it said. “From red squirrels and the Irish hare to Europe’s largest seabird colonies, seals and dolphins, the Causeway coast and glens has a plethora of nature on offer.”

 

Find the Guardians original article here.

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