*Catherine Ni Ciardha Land owner, Minister for state for Land Use and Biodiversity Pippa Hackett and Ecologist and Project Lead Barry O’Loughlin at the Shanakyle Bog Restoration and Habitat Enhancement Project EIP Launch Day. Photograph: Natasha Barton

THE completed Shanakyle Bog restoration and habitat enhancement project was launched earlier this month in a celebration of what is a first of its kind environmental initiative in Co. Clare.

Shanakyle, Parteen is the first raised bog to be rewetted in the county, a process of blocking drains to restore cut and degraded bogs to their previous condition.

Bog rewetting and rewilding creates favourable conditions for native biodiversity, enabling the growth sphagnum mosses, a renowned carbon sink, making this project a major step forward into a greener future for Clare.

Barry Oโ€™Loughlin, the ecologist who headed up the bog restoration, told The Clare Echo about the significance of the project. โ€œBogs store twice as much carbon as the worldโ€™s tropical rainforests. An EPA funded research study was carried out on Moyarwood Bog, a raised bog in Galway, and over a five-year period they discovered there was. 78 tonnes of carbon per hectare per year being absorbed on a rewetted section. Then they looked at a drained section for comparison and they found that it was emitting 1.57 tonnes per hectare per yearโ€.

Ragna Gruendler of Cloontabonnive Farm, West Clare and Congella McGuire Clare Heritage officer at the Shanakyle Bog Restoration and Habitat Enhancement Project EIP Launch Day, Photograph: Natasha Barton

The Inagh man said, โ€œThe Shanakyle Bog restoration all started when landowner Catherine Nรญ Ciardha contacted me to manage her land for biodiversity. I had carried out my masters project on Shanakyle bog in 2010, thatโ€™s how I knew Catherine, and since then I had worked with Bord na Mรณna on large scale rewetting and rehabilitation programs. So, I just said [to Catherine] โ€˜why donโ€™t we restore the bog?โ€™ which she was on for and then we ended up diversifying the project to include the creation of a wildlife pond, managing 10 acres of grassland for a wildflower meadow, and installing 30 bird nest boxes for rare and endangered speciesโ€.

The restoration of the 30 acre bog was completed on funding of โ‚ฌ3 million allocated by Minister of State for Land Use and Biodiversity, Pippa Hackett (GP) who attended the launch.

Catherine Ni Ciardha Land owner, Minister of State for Land Use and Biodiversity in the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine Pippa Hackett and Ecologist and Project Lead Barry O’Loughlin looking at different species of Sphagnum on the Shanakyle Bog in Parteen, Co Clare. Photograph: Natasha Barton

The restoration was a major success, Shanakyle bog has passed 50% sphagnum moss cover which means it is now considered โ€˜an active raised bogโ€™. Active raised bogs constitute less than 1% of Irelandโ€™s total land cover and are categorized as a rare annex 1 habitat under the EU habitats directive despite their environmental importance.

Barry says heโ€™s already seen a big improvement in the biodiversity of the bog, โ€œwe carried out the work from October to December in 2021 and already weโ€™re seeing sphagnum growing. Then of course weโ€™re getting a lot of birds of prey coming to the bog and weโ€™re getting mallards as well so itโ€™s becoming a biodiversity hotspotโ€.

Bog restoration is becoming popular nationwide, and Barry thinks the work at Shanakyle could inspire others, โ€œa community in Offaly contacted us and came down and now they want to do something after seeing what weโ€™ve done so it does have a knock-on effect on other groups. Thereโ€™s a group in Galway which have got funding and theyโ€™ve come down to Shanakyle as well, thereโ€™s just a huge interest in wetlands and what people can do on their own land. They see how itโ€™s done, and it encourages them to do something similarโ€.

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