Search Results
Showing 1,121 to 1,130 of 8,124 results for sea lice
-
A National Statistics Publication for Scotland
National Statistics publication that provides data on weight and value of sea fish and shellfish landed by fishing vessels, structure of the Scottish fishing fleet and employment on Scottish vessels. The supporting documents include accessible
-
Appendix D – Lot 1 Procurement Details
A revised report setting out the responses to the Public Review into eligible premises for public investment via Project Gigabit and actions taken as a result of the responses, including subsequent submissions. The report also describes the next
-
Marine Scotland Statutory Seal Licence Return Forms: EIR release
Information request and response under the Environmental Information (Scotland) Regulations 2004.
-
Tackling single-use plastic
Consultation launched on banning common single-use plastic items.
-
5. Assessment of proposals
SEA is a systematic process for evaluating the environmental consequences of proposed plans, strategies, or programmes. This Report accompanies the Small Landholding and Land Use Tenancy proposals, within the Land Reform Bill.
-
9. Annex 3: Further Information
National Statistics publication that provides data on the tonnage and value of all landings of sea fish and shellfish by Scottish vessels, all landings into Scotland, the rest of the UK and abroad, and the size and structure of the Scottish fishing
-
4. Assessment of draft proposals and reasonable alternatives
This environmental report is part of the strategic environmental assessment for the future of National Parks in Scotland.
-
Provisional Scottish sea fisheries statistics 2020
National Statistics publication that provides data on the tonnage and value of sea fish landings by Scottish vessels.
-
Scottish Sea Fisheries Statistics 2014
Statistics on the Scottish fishing fleet and its catches in 2014
- Part of:
- Sea fisheries statistics
-
3 Methodology
This report outlines the Scottish Islands Typology (2024). It classifies Scotland’s islands into ten categories based on combinations of population, access to local amenities, and access to mainland Scotland. It offers an alternative way to
There is a problem
Thanks for your feedback