1. Tuesday 🧵PART 2. Before we talk about #ClimateChange, we might have a look at what happens to all the #Carbon coming off the bogs and into the rivers and lakes, i.e. the transport of terrestrials stores of Carbon to the sea. This is a great infographic from the @c_cascades Infographic showing how car...
2. Current estimates put this at about 5.1 Pg of C per year, although most people expect this to rise, considering the high uncertainty, ongoing anthropogenic impacts, and continual refinement of the science aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/lo…
3. One of the parts of this carbon is Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) which is the brown colour that you see in bog streams – those of you with water supplies coming off bogs will be familiar with this kind of change
4. The peak in export of DOC from bogs in Ireland is in late summer / early autumn, and is fairly consistent across the sub-catchments of Burrishoole, being controlled by climate variables including temperature and rainfall bg.copernicus.org/articles/16/10…
5. Some of that terrestrial C sinks to the bottom of Feeagh, some gets exported downstream, some is emitted to the atmosphere as CO2 / CH4, and some is taken into the food web of the lake via plankton like these Plagioselmis (#heterotrophic #plankton) Plagioselmis  - a heterotro...
6. We have a paper coming out shortly summarising this, which is pretty exciting – the first full carbon budget (that we know of) for an Irish lake This is work done with Brian Doyle as part of his PhD
7. One part of this #CarbonBudget for Lough Feeagh that we havent fully got to grips with is the amount of #Methane (CH4) that is coming off the lake. @mctrulson is addressing this through the @MANTEL_ITN project. Look at these bubbles of methane! (only visible on a calm day)
8. So why are we so interested in #CarbonBudgets? Because its like a spreadsheet that captures #ClimateChange and #Landusechange impacts on the whole aquatic ecosystem - a bit like doing your accounts every year and seeing if you are in the red or the black - sink or source
9. @EleanorJennin11 did the first modelling work on Feeagh and its catchments, and showed that we might expect an increase of 15- 35% increase in DOC input in the coming century as the climate warms (orange boxplots in bottom graph) Graphs of DOC models under ...
10.What other #ClimateChange impacts are we expecting? Thanks to the foresight of the original SRT biologists, we now have one of the longest in-situ water temperature datasets in the world
📷M. Dillane paper chart recorder of wat...
11. This paper chart recorder has been measuring the surface water temperature of Feeagh since 1959, & we continue the measurement with a sensor. We know that the surface water of the lake is already warming quite considerably, especially in winter. 🥵(DOY is day of year) Water temperatures of the M...
12.Summer water temperatures are warming at a rate 0.2 degrees per decade, while winter temps are increasing at a rate of 0.3 degrees per decade graphs of summer and winter...
16. This has implications for how the lake functions. For example, we are starting to notice more #bluegreen algae then in previous years, which many people have linked with increasing water temperatures (although, as you expect, its probably more complicated than that ) 😉 Dolichospermum cellsA sample of algae under a m...
13. In upstream Lough Bunaveela, increasing winter temperatures are concerning, as we have a precious population of #ArcticChar, a cold water fish restricted to about 20 lakes in Ireland. They only spawn successfully spawn in cold water @S_O_Ceallaigh link.springer.com/article/10.100…
14. Feeagh is also being affected by #ExtremeEvents including #heatwaves and heavy #rainfall events. Our routine monitoring, including the high resolution data collected by the AWQMS provides an invaluable set of data to quantity resilience to, and recovery from extreme events
15. In 2009, a localised rainfall event dumped 50 mm of rain on the east side of the catchment in 2 hours, an event that took the lake 6 months to recover from 😱 tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108…
16. The west coast of Ireland is probably quite well buffered by the #AtlanticOcean against the harshest extremes of #ClimateChange but even so, we did not escape the heatwave of summer 2022, when we had unprecedented water temperatures in the surface waters of Feeagh Normal range of water tempe...
17. To wrap up, how can we move beyond locally valuable case studies, such as described today, toward greater understanding of the complex interactions between the ecological impacts of #ClimateChage and those of other human-caused stresses?
18. One way is to COLLABORATE! Lough Feeagh is one of the sentinel sites in the @GLEONetwork, a grassroots network of people interested in understanding, predicting and communicating the role and response of lakes in a changing global environment gleon.org
@GLEONetwork We have learnt so much from our interaction with @GLEONetwork and Feeagh data has been used in many super GLEON publications. Seeing a little dot on the west of Ireland, and knowing that our data is contributing to global scientific advancement is 👍👍
agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.10… map of teh world showing tr...
@GLEONetwork 19. OK, so tomorrow, we are going to talk about #Salmon, which I suspect is what most of you have been waiting for…......advance warning: its not good news🙁
Oíche mhaith👋 An Atlantic salmon

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More from @IrelandsEnviro

Oct 27
1. Good morning ☀️ Thursdays 🧵is about #Trout
For clarity, we are talking about Salmo trutta, the native trout to Ireland, which can be either resident (brown trout) or migratory (sea trout) or many things in between 📸 G. Rogan
@WildTroutTrust @AST_Salmon @TheFSBI #FishSci Juvenile trout
@TheFSBI 2. Trout display phenotypic plasticity. A phenotype is a set of observable characteristics or traits of an organism ➡️what does it look like and how does it function? Here’s various L. Melvin trout, thanks to A. Ferguson & P. Prodöhl @QUBelfast
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.11… Types of trout from Lough M...
@TheFSBI @QUBelfast 3. For trout, the decision to stay put in freshwater, or migrate to sea is complex, governed by genetics, the condition of the fish, and environmental conditions. This is an excellent infographic also from Andy and Paulo @QUBelfast , + Tom Cross, @TomEReed & @mcginnity_p @uccBEES infographic of trout life h...
Read 26 tweets
Oct 26
1. Wednesdays 🧵thanks for your patience. Had a busy day 😐. Hope this is worth the wait. Today, we are going to talk about the Burrishoole population of Salmo salar, the mighty Atlantic salmon
📽️Ger Rogan
2. From the outset, we are talking about Atlantic salmon today (Salmo salar) and not any of the Pacific salmon species (various Oncorhynchus sp.). 1 of these species is making in-roads into this side of the Atlantic (the PINK salmon), but that’s a whole other story A pink salmon
3. Why do salmon receive so much attention, in comparison to other fish species? @SteveOrmerod put it very well:
Read 31 tweets
Oct 25
1. Good morning 👋
Tuesdays 🧵Given that most of #Mayo has #Peat soil, it should come as no surprise that the water flowing through the Burrishoole catchment is full of #Carbon, giving the rivers and lakes their typical brown, dark colour
📸credit G. Rogan & J. Cooney Altahoney river Lough Feeagh and a harbour
2. There’s nothing particularly special about Lough Feeagh. It’s a fairly typical, deep, #Humic lake (45m deep), similar to many lakes that you find in all the mountainous regions along the west coast. It’s a pretty nice place to work
3. The impacts of #ClimateChange & #LandUse that we measure in Feeagh, therefore, are likely to be replicated in lakes in any of Ireland’s blanket bog catchments (to varying degrees). We'll look at #LandUse change 1st, and how it impacts rivers and downstream aquatic ecosystems
Read 15 tweets
Oct 24
1. Mondays 🧵 is about long term monitoring.
How many people have a wall like this in their house? It’s the basic principle of long term monitoring: measure the same thing, the same way, in the same place, over many years (until your kids have flown the nest 😢) 🪺🪹
#Data Marks on a wall showing chi...
2. Long term monitoring and data collection leads to LTER – Long Term Ecological Research, where we use these data to understand natural variability, but also the complex interactions between people and nature over many years 📈📉📊🌳#LTER @eLTER_Europe @ILTER_network Slide of why questions rela...
3. In Burrishoole, data collection started in 1955 with counting fish: how many migratory (diadromous) fish were moving between freshwater (Lough Feeagh– top of photo) and the sea (Lough Furnace – bottom of photo) ?????? Aerial view of Lough Feeagh...
Read 24 tweets
Oct 24
1. Hi everyone, I’m Elvira de Eyto @edeeyto , and this week I’ll be talking about long term monitoring, freshwater ecosystems, migratory fish and a bit about freshwater pearl mussels. I work at the research station in the Burrishoole catchment run by the @MarineInst Aerial view of the Marine Institute, Co. Mayo
@edeeyto @MarineInst 2. I grew up near Navan, Co. Meath, spent a good bit of time in @TCDZoology doing a degree in natural sciences followed by a PhD and subsequent research work on the ecological assessment of lakes
How can we tell what condition a lake is in ?💦
This is the beautiful #LoughCarra Littoral zone of Lough Carra
3. I did my PhD with 3 partners-in-crime @gnfree_gf @J0naf1n and Rossana Caroni, and we spent 2 years driving around 🇮🇪 with a little inflatable boat sampling many many many lakes. No camera phones in those days! 📸These are literally the only 3 photos I have of those 2 years Boat on Lough Inchiquinn, Jonathan, Gary and our boat, Elvir
Read 26 tweets
Oct 23
Sunday 🧵
1. On my last day as curator for @irelandsenv, I’m going to have a look at how #climate change might affect Irish peatlands in the decades ahead.
Photos: @RuairiOSiochain @flo_renouwilson @peatyGHG ImageImageImage
2. We have seen over the past week that peatland land uses vary considerably in both area and their carbon dynamics... Image
3....but also in their carbon content.

epa.ie/publications/r… Image
Read 21 tweets

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