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Loch Ness Monster: The Plan Scottish officials have if the beast is caught


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SCOTTISH officials have a plan ready if the Loch Ness Monster is ever caught.

Officials drew up a set of guidelines on how to protect the new species — including releasing it back into its watery home.

The “partly serious, partly fun” code of practice was written in 2001 by Scottish Natural Heritage, which is funded by the Scottish government.

SNH said it will “dust off” the plan and put it into action should the fabled beast be discovered, the BBC reported.

It says officials should take a DNA sample from the monster so scientists can study the creature.

Then it should be released back into the Loch with measures put in place to make sure it is not disturbed — as it would be an extremely rare species needing conservation.

SNH, which promotes Scottish wildlife and natural habitats, said the 17-year-old code of practice remained relevant today.

The organisation’s Nick Halfhide said: “There was a lot of activity on the loch at the time about Nessie.

“So, partly serious and partly for a bit of fun, we drew up a contingency plan about how we would help Nessie if and when she was found.

“Some of the lessons we learned then have been relevant when we have reintroduced species like sea eagles, and were used when, a couple of years ago, four new species were found in the sea off the west coast.”

He added the plan would need to be updated when Nessie is discovered, and local communities and businesses on the shores of Loch Ness would be consulted.

The discovery would lead to a boom in tourism to the Loch, which already attracts 400,000 visitors a year from around the world because of the legend.

Tales of a monster go back nearly 1,500 years to when Irish missionary St Columba is said to have encountered a beast in the River Ness in 565AD.

More recently there have been numerous sightings and pictures — some of which turned out to be faked but others remain unexplained.

The creature’s appearance has been described as resembling a plesiosaur, an ancient sea monster that died out with the dinosaurs.

Earlier this year an international team of scientists gathered environmental DNA from Loch Ness for analysis.

The study will aim to confirm what species live there — including possibly any unknown animals that might be lurking in the 754ft (230 metre) depths.

Last month First Minister Nicola Sturgeon insisted the Loch Ness Monster exists in an interview with ITV’s Good Morning Britain.

Over the years various efforts have tried and failed to find the beast.

In 1987 a £1 million ($A1.788 million) exploration called Operation Deepscan used a fleet of 24 boats which used sonar equipment to trawled 23-mile long lake.

Nessie must have been hiding because the team came back with nothing.

HUNT FOR A LEGENDARY MONSTER
There have been dozens of sightings of the fabled creature over the years.

Irish monk St Columba was said to have seen a “giant water beast” dragging a man to his death in the River Ness in the year 565.

A road built alongside the 23-mile lake made it easier for people to visit and sightings of the monster soon followed.

The most famous is the “surgeon’s photograph” taken by Dr Kenneth Wilson in 1934 and published in the Daily Mail.

It fooled people for 40 years and ignited worldwide curiosity in the local myth. But in 1975 the image was exposed as a hoax, created with a wooden head and neck attached to a toy submarine.

There have been more than 1,000 sightings since, and a host of documentaries attempting to explain the legend.

One of the most convincing photographs showed a brown dinosaur-like hump arching out of the water in 2012.

Local tour boat operator George Edwards later admitted he faked it “for a bit of fun” using a fibreglass prop from a 2011 National Geographic documentary.

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