Thursday 🧵 1. In yesterday’s thread, we travelled the grim & dark road that is peat extraction in Ireland. Today, something brighter & jam-packed with potential for the environment in general, & for the climate in particular.
Folks, let’s talk REWETTING & RESTORATION
2. First, we need to define what we mean by #rewetting and #restoration as these terms are frequently used interchangeably and often incorrectly.
3. @IPCC_CH Wetlands Supplement describes #rewetting as the management act (e.g. drain blocking, bund construction etc.) that is carried out to permanently #restore all the functions of the pre-damaged peatland, e.g. water level, plant species, carbon cycling.
4. Others interpret peatland restoration as setting the site on the “pathway to full functioning”. However, for some modified peatland sites, such as grasslands, achieving full restoration will certainly not happen tomorrow and may require many, many human lifetimes.
5. In Canada, restoration is a legal requirement on peat extraction companies once extraction ceases. @RochefortLine and colleagues have been at the forefront of restoration research for decades and their methods have been exported to other countries.
6. In Ireland, one of the first large-scale peatland rewetting projects was established at a former extraction site at Turraun, Co. Offaly in the 1990s by @BordnaMona with the aim to create an amenity wetland.
7. In the following decades, the @BordnaMona Ecology Team (@seewilkie@davidfallon8) fine-tuned rewetting methodology to deliver biodiversity and carbon benefits, rather than for amenity purposes.
Photos: @davidfallon8
8. Currently, under the Peatlands Climate Action Scheme, @bnm have committed to rewet 33,000 hectares of peatland (slightly less than 50% of their land holdings). @stephenbarry01 & colleagues are investigating carbon exchange at a number of locations.
10. So, does rewetting work from a carbon perspective? Does it plug the enormous emissions from degraded sites? Does it lay the groundwork for carbon sequestration?
11. The first peatland carbon exchange research carried out at Turraun in 2002/03 was not promising. As the site had not been rewetted with carbon storage in mind, the water table fluctuated considerably with the result that it lost more carbon than it took in.
12. However, at the same time, new rewetting techniques (bunds, cells) were being put in place at sites, such as Bellacorick, Co. Mayo that were proving to be very successful in keeping the site wet and the carbon locked in. Photos: @seewilkie
13. Between 2009 and 2013, we monitored carbon exchange at that site and found that water levels stayed up, CO2 emissions had stopped, methane emissions were relatively low, and we were in bonus territory with considerable CO2 uptake 🥳🥳🥳
13. Other peatland rewetting studies in Ireland using similar techniques have since confirmed the very promising results from Bellacorick.
14. Our most recent 5-year study at Moyarwood bog, Co. Galway has just been published. The 230-hectare site was drained in the 1980s for industrial extraction that never took place. Drain blocking was carried out in 2012/2013 and we commenced carbon measurements immediately.
15. Our results showed that drain blocking was incredibly successful in rising the water table and the site rapidly switched from losing around 6 tonnes CO2 per hectare per year to taking up (sequestering) around 5 tonnes. GAME ON!!
16. While rewetting also resulted in a large surge of methane emissions, modelling work indicated that the site was having a less warming effect on the climate than the drained site, & that we can expect it to have a cooling climate effect by 2085, similar to natural sites.
17. Similar findings have been reported for peatlands elsewhere (see work by @terhorab
& @VytasH for example). Peatland rewetting is a triple win 👇
18. The last few years have seen the establishment of a plethora of peatland carbon monitoring projects across the country specifically looking at post-extraction peatlands (e.g. @CarePeat). We await their findings with great interest.
Photos: @AitovaInNature@matts20000
19. In summary, evidence from Ireland and abroad clearly shows the environmental and climate benefits from rewetting peat extraction sites.
REWET & RESTORE, my friends, REWET & RESTORE.
20. If this thread has sparked an interest in carbon and rewetted peatlands, feel free to visit and download any of the publications I have been involved with over the last 2 decades. Great bedtime reading. earthymatters.ie/publications
21. Tomorrow, I’ll be talking about forestry, carbon and peatlands.
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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!
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 😲
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
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
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! 🇪🇺
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
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
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.