
Cardigan Bay is home to an amazingly rich variety of marine animals
and plants, the rare and ever playful bottlenose dolphin being
just one of them.Together with the valuable habitats on which
they rely, this makes the Bay an outstanding and internationally
important marine environment.
In
recognition of its importance, parts of the Bay have been selected
as Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) - a European designation
that will help to ensure that the area and its wildlife are safeguarded
for the benefit and enjoyment of future generations.
This
website provides information about the wildlife and habitats of
the Cardigan Bay Special Area of Conservation, how the site is
being managed, and how you can play a vital role in helping us
to conserve it for the future.
The
origins of Special Areas
of Conservation (SACs)
The
1992 Rio Earth Summit put biodiversity firmly on the global political
agenda. Closer to home the European Communities produced the Habitats
Directive (Council Directive 92/43/EEC on the conservation
of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora).
The main aim of the Habitats Directive is to help to conserve
the diversity of habitats and species across the European Union.
This it aims to deliver through the designation of Special
Areas of Conservation (SACs)
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