Special Protection Areas (SPAs)
Background
Special Protection Areas (SPAs) are strictly protected sites
classified in accordance with Article 4 of the
EC Birds Directive, which
came into force in April 1979. They are classified for rare and
vulnerable birds (as listed on Annex I of the Directive), and for
regularly occurring migratory species. The
European Commission's website hosts a full copy of the
EC Directive on the conservation of wild birds (79/409/EEC),
within which all the Articles and Annexes (including
amendments) are given, along with useful interpretation
information.
Classification of SPAs
In the UK, the first SPAs were identified and classified in
the early to mid 1980s. Classification has since progressed and a
regularly updated
UK SPA
Summary Table provides an overview of both the number of
classified SPAs and those approved by Government that are currently
in the process of being classified (these are known as potential
SPAs, or pSPAs).
A
full list of UK
SPAs is also available, which gives the site name, site code,
area, and location and its classification status. This has also
been split into lists for each individual country in the UK
(England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales).
The Birds Directive provides no formal criteria for selecting
SPAs, so the JNCC, on behalf of the statutory country conservation
agencies and government, published
SPA Selection Guidelines for
use in the UK. Each SPA has been selected according to the
principles laid out in the selection guidelines. At the time of
classification two documents are produced; the citation and the
Natura 2000 Standard Data Form. Both are legal documents, the
former is used within the UK to consult with the public at
classification, and the latter is derived from the citation and is
the standard way in which data are registered by government and
transmitted to the European Commission.
The boundary of each classified SPA is mapped digitally.
UK SPA boundaries can be downloaded in the form of ArcShape
files for use in a GIS. Boundaries are not available for potential
SPAs.
The European Commission tracks progress in classification of
SPAs across the European Union by analysing the data submitted to
it by Member States in the Natura 2000 Standard Data Form. This
progress is then summarised in the regularly updated
Natura 2000 Barometer, which gives details of the number of
sites classified, the total area covered by these and what
proportion of the country this represents, along with a simple
assessment of how complete both a country's SPA network is and are
the data that have been sent to the Commission.
Review of the UK SPA Network
In the
mid-1990s, the JNCC and country agencies were requested by
government to review the SPA network in the UK. This review process
culminated with the publication of what is commonly known as the
SPA Review (Stroud
et al. 2001; The UK SPA network: its scope and content,
JNCC).
The SPA Review revised our understanding of the UK SPA
network, both in terms of the number of sites selected and the
species that qualify within these sites. The review presents site
accounts that may differ from the currently classified SPA citation
and Natura 2000 Standard Data Form. These accounts are effectively
lists of potential qualifying species and as such, according to
government policy, these species are fully protected in the SPA or
pSPA. As a result of the review the legal documents for many
classified SPAs in the UK network now require amending to
incorporate changes to qualifying species; this process will take
some time to complete.
At completion of the SPA Review, the government consulted
widely with other stakeholders on the results. In response to this
consultation the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Defra) convened an advisory group to take forward further
consideration of SPA network development; the
UK SPA & Ramsar
(Avian) Scientific Working Group (SPAR SWG).
The SPA Review focused largely on terrestrial SPAs, but
recognised the need for a review of implementation of the Birds
Directive in the UK's marine environment. This is now well underway
and more information is available elsewhere on this website in
Marine Protected
Areas. However, future updates to the information presented
here will also include marine SPAs.