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Friday, August 8, 2025
WHAT HAPPENS IF THE LOCH NESS MONSTER IS FOUND?
People have been looking for Nessie for almost 100 years.
Humps have been seen moving across Loch Ness, and strange sounds heard from beneath the surface - but no actual monster. A four-day "quest" - the latest in a long series of efforts to unravel the mystery - has been held this week.
But what would happen if the Loch Ness Monster was found - besides, of course, creating a global sensation?
A spokesperson told us: "The Nessie Contingency Plan was produced back in 2001, at a time when there was a lot of Nessie-hunting activity on the loch.
"We were regularly being asked by the media and others what we would do if or when she, or he, was found.
"The code of practice, which was partly serious and partly for a bit of fun, was drawn up to offer protection not just to the elusive monster, but to any new species found in the loch."
The plan stipulates that a DNA sample should be taken from any new creature, and then it should be released back into the loch. The animal would also be afforded the same legal protection as Scotland's other native wildlife, such as wildcats and golden eagles.
It means it would be illegal to kill, injure or capture the monster.
The authorities have raised concerns for Nessie in the past.
In 1938 a senior police officer warned the Scottish Office of a planned hunting expedition "determined to catch the monster dead or alive".
The party claimed they were having a special harpoon gun made and were headed for the loch with 20 "experienced men".
The legend of a monster dates back to the Middle Ages when Irish monk St Columba is said to have encountered a creature in the Ness, a river that flows from Loch Ness. The modern myth of Nessie began centuries later. In April 1933, hotel manageress Aldie Mackay told of seeing a whale-like creature and the loch's water "cascading and churning".
The Inverness Courier newspaper reported the sighting and the editor at the time, Evan Barron, suggested the beast be described as a "monster".
Sightings continue to be made in recent times, with the Official Loch Ness Monster Sightings Register having received 1,161 reports since its launch in 1996. There were three last year and one report for 2025 so far, according to the register.
This year's sighting described two humps moving across the loch. Over the years, the reports have included objects moving fast across the loch, and a creature with crocodile-like skin.
For those contingency planners at NatureScot the worry is something unpleasant might be uncovered in Loch Ness.
The spokesperson added: "While the evidence for the existence of the Loch Ness Monster is questionable, the threat posed by climate change and biodiversity loss to all the plants and animals that live in our lochs is all too real."
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