Ireland's Environmentalists Profile picture
Oct 18, 2022 19 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Tuesday 🧵
1. Today, I want to talk about carbon cycling in natural peatlands, as these ecosystems provide the baseline against which we assess damaged sites & evaluate restoration success. Plus, they act as the “canary-in-the-mine” for ongoing & future climate change. ImageImageImage
2. A natural peatland is undamaged, drained or modified and is characterised by a persistently high water table that ensures that more carbon goes into the system than goes out. The old adage that a wet bog is a good bog holds true here.
3. In Ireland, very little (if any) of our peatlands can be considered natural. Instead, we use the terms near-natural and near-intact to accept the fact that all our sites have been modified to some extent.
4. Our near-natural peatlands include areas of Atlantic blanket bogs, mountain blanket bogs, raised bogs and a small amount of fens but differ in their carbon dynamics, e.g. nutrient-rich fens produce much greater methane emissions than nutrient poor bogs. Connolly and Holden (2009)
5. Even within a single site, the exchange of greenhouse gases between the peatland and the atmosphere can vary considerably both over time (HOT-TIMES: day, season, years) and spatially (HOT-SPOTS: vegetation community, water level, aerenchyma plants).
6. In general, the wetter areas within a site are likely to be bigger carbon sinks than “drier” hummocks for example. Image
7. Although conversely, wetter areas exhibit greater methane emissions, especially pools colonised by bog-bean (Menyanthes trifoliata) for example. Image
8. Some peatland plants, such as bog-cotton have specialised tissues called aerenchyma that are designed to passively move oxygen to the submerged roots but also allow methane to move back up through the plant to the atmosphere.

9. Plants such as Typha latifolia take this process one step further and actively drive (through pressure gradients) oxygen down to the roots and methane up to the atmosphere. Image
10. In addition to sequestering CO2 and emitting methane, natural peatlands also lose some carbon in the water (known as dissolved organic carbon or DOC).
11. In most years, natural sites are net carbon sinks and are resilient to short periods of drought due to the presence of Sphagnum mosses that are able to hold considerable volumes of water and prevent the bog drying out and releasing CO2. Image
12. We are fortunate in Ireland to have long-term (10 years) carbon data from a near-natural blanket bog at Glencar, Co. Kerry. For the period of the study, the site was a sink for carbon of around 30 g carbon per m2 per year. Wilson et al. (2012)
13. As I mentioned in yesterday’s thread, this small amount, when repeated over 1000s of years, produces huge carbon stores that can be rapidly lost when the site is drained or damaged.
14. Carbon monitoring is currently ongoing at Clara bog where @matts20000 and @ShaneRegan34 and colleagues are also determining the extent of carbon gains or losses and investigating what drives this exchange at this site. Image
15. The recent @ProjectAuger report estimates that near-natural peatlands hold around a quarter of the 2.2 billion tonnes of carbon held in Irish peatlands.
epa.ie/publications/r… Image
16. Therefore, it is critically important that we ensure that these sites remain wet and are adequately protected so that they can continue to store their carbon for another 10,000 years.
17. Tomorrow, I will talk about carbon and peat extraction. Buckle up, cos the ride is about to get bumpy.
Photo: @matts20000

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Ireland's Environmentalists

Ireland's Environmentalists Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @IrelandsEnviro

Jun 9, 2023
Day 05 of @RhodoRangers here!

I nearly forgot to tweet - apologies

The topic today - How to square a circle?

Also known as Integrated Stakeholder Management and how you might eliminate 1 invasive species from 1 county!

Buckle up because I don't know where this will go!

1/n
We have 3 loose goals as aforementioned;

- Physical removal of Rhododendron
- Increase in public awareness of status and impacts
- Push for increased collaboration and integrated management at a county and national level!

2/n

We're constantly on the lookout for invaded spots, mapping and talking to people about rhodo sites to see if we can help!

This is all voluntary for all of us

3/n

Read 16 tweets
Jun 8, 2023
Day 04 of @RhodoRangers takeover

I was meant to talk about 2 topics today but will only be talking about Site Restoration post clearance as I counted days wrong and can dedicate another day to site wide county activity!

So you've started clearing your site - what's next?

1/n
Personally I favour hands off intervention but we can't always do this!

As you can see below, removal of rhododendron leaves a mark!

Some studies show diversity in some places is still impacted 30 years after clearance 😲

Have a look at this; hutton.ac.uk/news/native-pl…

2/n Cleared rhododendron site, ...
So where do we start?

Few simple Qs

1) What type of habitat do you have/should you have?
2) How much follow up work is there?
3) What are the future risks?

3/n Heath covered in shrub like...Two cut rhodo plants in upl...
Read 11 tweets
Jun 7, 2023
Day 03

@RhodoRangers here again

It's time to talk rhodo removal, how to, tips & tricks and more

⚠️WARNING⚠️
This is not a qualified list and we make no claims for Health and Safety - be careful out there & read rules/regulations/instructions
⚠️

Now that's out of the way

1/n
⚠️
Seriously on the Be Safe part though!
⚠️

Whats the easiest way to remove rhododendron?
A natural herbivore would be of course

Only one animal seems to eat Rhododendron, the Takin from Asia

Though I wonder what would wild boar do to areas of infestation 🤔

2/n Photo of a takin, a bulky g...
So natural grazing is out of question and its up to people to sort it!

1st step - The Plan

What type of infestation do you have? How much time & resources do you have? How sensitive is the area to disturbance limiting activity?

Simple Qs

3/n

Read 15 tweets
Jun 1, 2023
Thursday's topic: Wolves (and lynx) in Europe.

Terrors of the forest? Or necessary keystone species?

As with everything in ecology, nothing is simple! Today I (@AdamFSmith) will look at some myths, science, and interesting facts about these species. Claws out, let's go! 🐺

1/n Wolf and lynx confront one ...
Firstly, this is my immediate research area. Over the last 3 years I have been involved in numerous studies involving wolves and lynx, however the "speed of science" means few are published right now!

It is extremely complex, so over Twitter you'll have to bare with me!

2/n Adam wearing a wolf hat and...
Europe's legal protection and softening public opinion has successfully seen population and range rebounds for these species.

Both are listed as protected under the EU Habitat's Directive and cannot be hunted in EU countries! 🇪🇺

BUT...

3/n Maps of where wolves and ly...
Read 20 tweets
May 15, 2023
Hi everyone, Kez here, I'm really excited to chat with you all this week about my research & life as an Irish Ornithologist. I’ve been working in ornithology/ conservation for over nine years, first with @WWT, then PhD @QUBEcology & now working as a consultant ornithologist. 1/n
I’ve been ringing birds all across Ireland since 2014, & my main focus for ringing is raptors, waders & waterfowl, working with @nirsg and @brentgoosechase. My first love will always be the Light-bellied Brent Goose, but this week I plan to talk about my PhD research. 2/n Image
From geese to raptors is quite a jump, but it was important. Worldwide, raptors are beneficial across an entire range of ecosystem services, from regulating prey populations, providing cultural services… 3/n
Read 12 tweets
May 14, 2023
#NewProfilePic

A HUGE thank you to @DuhallowBlueDot and @BlueDotWaters for a GREAtT week

Make sure to follow their accounts to stay up to date!

Next up is @alethionaut, curating from May 15th! Image
Kez is an ornithologist, bird ringer, President of @CopelandBirdOb and the @_BTO Regional Rep for Co. Down. Kez completed her PhD researching the Common kestrel in Ireland from Queen’s University Belfast!
This week, @alethionaut will be talking about this amazing raptor, the Common Kestrel & its conservation issues in Ireland & how to get involved.
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(