Loch Fleet
Loch Fleet | |
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File:Loch Fleet from the east bank.jpg
View from Littleferry looking inland.
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Location | south of Golspie, Sutherland |
Coordinates | grid reference NH7896Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Basin countries | Scotland |
Designated | 24 March 1997 |
Loch Fleet (Scottish Gaelic: Loch Fleòid) is a sea loch on the east coast of Scotland, located between Golspie and Dornoch. It forms the estuary of the River Fleet, a small spate river that rises in the hills east of Lairg.
Contents
Geography and geology
Loch Fleet is a shallow, bar-built estuary with extensive sand-flats and mud-flats backed by saltmarsh and sand dunes.[1]
Flora and fauna
On 24 March 1997, the Dornoch Firth and Loch Fleet Special Protection Area (SPA) was established for wildlife conservation.[1] The SPA covers 7,836.33 hectares (19,364 acres) of Loch Fleet, the Dornoch Firth, Morrich More, the Mound Alderwoods and Tarbat Ness.[1] The Joint Nature Conservation Committee described it as "one of the best examples in northwest Europe of a large complex estuary which has been relatively unaffected by industrial development".[1]
The total SPA hosts significant populations of the following birds:
- Breeding: osprey (Pandion haliaetus) - in the early 1990s there were 10 breeding pairs.[1]
- Overwintering: bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica), greylag goose (Anser anser), wigeon (Anas penelope), curlew (Numenius arquata), dunlin (Calidris alpina alpina), oystercatcher (Haematopus ostralegus) and teal (Anas crecca).
Heading inland, the alder woods around the mouth of the river at the Mound are significant.
History
The ruins of Skelbo Castle are situated on the south side of the loch.
The Battle of Littleferry was fought on the day before the Battle of Culloden in 1746. The Sutherland militia came down from the hills above Golspie and fell upon around 500 men led by the Earl of Cromarty. Cromarty's men were cornered in the Littleferry peninsula on the northeast side of the loch, and were either killed, captured, or drowned in the loch.
Notes and references
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with OS grid coordinates
- Articles containing Scottish Gaelic-language text
- Special Protection Areas in Scotland
- Sea lochs of Scotland
- National nature reserves in Scotland
- Lochs of Highland (council area)
- Ramsar sites in Scotland
- Sites of Special Scientific Interest in South East Sutherland
- Protected areas of Highland (council area)