true

ISRA FACTSHEETS

EUROPEAN ATLANTIC

ISRA FACTSHEETS

EUROPEAN ATLANTIC

Inner Hebrides ISRA

11/124

Inner Hebrides ISRA

Inner Hebrides

Summary

Inner Hebrides is located in the northern Sea of Hebrides on the west coast of Scotland, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It is situated west of the Isle of Mull and south of the Isle of Skye. The area encompasses the surrounding waters of the Isles of Coll, Tiree, Rum, Eigg, Muck, Canna, and Hyskeir. The habitat is characterised by sandy and rocky substrates. It is influenced by the Scottish Coastal Current. Within this area there are: threatened species (e.g., Tope Galeorhinus galeus); and undefined aggregations (e.g., Basking Shark Cetorhinus maximus).

Inner Hebrides

DESCRIPTION OF HABITAT

Inner Hebrides is located in the northern Sea of Hebrides on the west coast of Scotland in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It is situated west of the Isle of Mull and south of the Isle of Skye. The area encompasses the waters around the Isles of Coll, Tiree, Rum, Eigg, Muck, Canna, and Hyskeir. The habitat is characterised by sandy and rocky substrates (Moore & Wilson 2002). It is influenced by the Scottish Coastal Current (Inall et al. 2009), with the variation in phytoplankton being a driver of productivity in the area (Fehling et al. 2012).

This Important Shark and Ray Area is benthic and pelagic and is delineated from inshore and surface waters (0 m) to 114 m based on the bathymetry of the area.

CRITERION A

VULNERABILITY

Two Qualifying Species considered threatened with extinction according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species regularly occur in the area. These are the Critically Endangered Tope (Walker et. al. 2020) and the Endangered Basking Shark (Rigby et al. 2021).

CRITERION C

SUB-CRITERION C5 – UNDEFINED AGGREGATIONS

Inner Hebrides is an important area for undefined aggregations of two shark species.

Opportunistic land-based and vessel-based sightings reported by citizen scientists to the Shark Trust’s Basking Shark Project are collated into a dedicated database, with records since 1987 (Shark Trust unpubl. data 2025). Observations of three or more individuals reported at one time were extracted, and duplicate records were removed. Between 2010–2019, a total of 5,210Basking Sharks were observed from 392 aggregations (Shark Trust unpubl. data 2025). The mean number of aggregations per year in this period was 25 (maximum of 301 individuals in one aggregation), with 326 individuals sighted per year on average. Aggregations have been reported from this area in 2010 (n = 99 aggregations; 1,445 individuals), 2011 (n = 53 aggregations; 742 individuals), 2012 (n = 70 aggregations; 1,452 individuals), 2013 (n = 83 aggregations; 962 individuals), 2014 (n = 11 aggregations; 82 individuals), 2015 (n = 49 aggregations; 322 individuals), 2016 (n = 17 aggregations; 136 individuals), 2017 (n = 3 aggregations; 11 individuals), 2018 (n = 5 aggregations; 40 individuals), 2019 (n = 1 aggregation; 9 individuals), and 2025 (n = 1 aggregation; 9 individuals). Additional aggregations in this area are indicated through tagging and tracking data, and underwater footage (Witt et al. 2019). This is one of the locations in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland with the highest number of contemporary known citizen science reports of Basking Shark aggregations. This species may be aggregating in this area for feeding purposes based on direct observations by citizen scientists of animals feeding at the surface (Shark Trust unpubl. data 2025). Further information is required to understand the nature and function of these aggregations.

Tope aggregate in groups of more than one thousand individuals in Vaul Bay off Tiree Island in this area. A citizen scientist visits the island for two weeks per year (P Stewart & J Thorburn unpubl. data 2025). Annual citizen science drone footage (~20 minutes per flight) has observed large aggregations in 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024. Higher resolution data are available for recent survey years when Tope aggregations were observed on four days in each of 2021, 2022, and 2023. A dedicated research trip in 2024, where Tope were caught via rod-and-line, confirmed species presence (J Thorburn unpubl. data 2025). These aggregations represent the largest demonstrated aggregation of this species within the United Kingdom of Great Britain of Northern Ireland, and adjacent jurisdictions including Ireland. Further information is required to understand the nature and function of these aggregations.

SUBMIT A REQUEST

ISRA SPATIAL LAYER REQUEST

To make a request to download the ISRA Layer in either a GIS compatible Shapefile (.shp) or Google Earth compatible Keyhole Markup Language Zipped file (.kmz) please complete the following form. We will review your request and send the download details to you. We will endeavor to send you the requested files as soon as we can. However, please note that this is not an automated process, and before requests are responded to, they undergo internal review and authorization. As such, requests normally take 5–10 working days to process.

Should you have questions about the data or process, please do not hesitate to contact us.

    * indicates required

    Industry or sector (*)

    Under the terms and conditions of our User License Agreement , full and appropriate acknowledgement is required in any materials and publications derived from the data (and copies should be sent to the IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group through the contact form). For any publications making substantial use of the data, the ISRA welcomes the opportunity for co-authorship, collaboration, and to comment prior to publication.


    Furthermore, we need to know whether you are a commercial or non-commercial user. Non-commercial includes scientific research, education or conservation. Commercial is defined as follows: any use by, on behalf of, or to inform or assist the activities of a commercial entity (that operates ‘for profit’) or use by a non-profit for the purposes of revenue generation

    Type of use(*):

    Please specify which layer (ex. all layers, layers within a specific Region, layers within a Jurisdiction or a single ISRA): Purpose (*):

    Please provide a description of how you intend to use the ISRA GIS Dataset. The more details you provide, the faster we can respond to your request. We may require further clarification prior to providing access. (min. 100 characters – max 1,000 characters)



    File format request (*)

    By providing your personal data, you consent to its processing as described below. The IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group will use the information you provide on this form to send the documents you requested. You can change your mind at any time by writing to the ISRA Data Coordinator www.sharkrayareas.org/contact. All personal details provided will be treated with respect. For any information you can visit our Privacy Policy.
    Please read the User License Agreement and ISRA Layer Metadata Description

    This form uses Google reCaptcha to reduce spam. Privacy - Terms