Objectives
The Inagh EIP is supporting local farmers, forestry owners and members of the local community to address the challenge of biodiversity loss by working to enhance habitat connectivity. The Inagh EIP is designed to deliver a new approach to address the joint concerns of biodiversity and habitat loss and concurrent loss of high ecological status water bodies in the Upper Inagh River Catchment, West Clare, by developing farming for nature and catchment sensitive farming and forestry practices. The overall aim is to demonstrate that biodiversity loss can be minimised, and site-specific mitigation measures can be implemented by farmers, scientists and advisors working together on a catchment scale.
Objectives
The Inagh EIP is supporting local farmers, forestry owners and members of the local community to address the challenge of biodiversity loss by working to enhance habitat connectivity. The Inagh EIP is designed to deliver a new approach to address the joint concerns of biodiversity and habitat loss and concurrent loss of high ecological status water bodies in the Upper Inagh River Catchment, West Clare, by developing farming for nature and catchment sensitive farming and forestry practices. The overall aim is to demonstrate that biodiversity loss can be minimised, and site-specific mitigation measures can be implemented by farmers, scientists and advisors working together on a catchment scale.
Activities
Deliver on-farm biodiversity and forestry measures, co-designed with local farming community, including:
- Establish pond networks, create pocket wetlands / inceptor ponds.
- Widen buffer zones where site hydrology and the slope increases the vulnerability of receiving waters.
- Build bunds (separating forestry areas & water course)
- Setback planting of single trees or small groups of suitable native riparian species, for bank stabilisation / dappled shading for aquatic life and encourage thinning to let light in.
- Examine options for continuous cover forestry.
Clear conifers planted close to water courses; replace with broadleaves, review setback areas / riparian zones.
Activities
Deliver on-farm biodiversity and forestry measures, co-designed with local farming community, including:
- Establish pond networks, create pocket wetlands / inceptor ponds.
- Widen buffer zones where site hydrology and the slope increases the vulnerability of receiving waters.
- Build bunds (separating forestry areas & water course)
- Setback planting of single trees or small groups of suitable native riparian species, for bank stabilisation / dappled shading for aquatic life and encourage thinning to let light in.
- Examine options for continuous cover forestry.
Clear conifers planted close to water courses; replace with broadleaves, review setback areas / riparian zones.
Project details
- Main funding source
- Rural development 2014-2020 for Operational Groups
- Rural Development Programme
- 2014IE06RDNP001 Ireland - Rural Development Programme (National)
Emplacement
- Main geographical location
- Mid-West
EUR 181 450.00
Total budget
Total contributions from EAFRD, national co-financing, additional national financing and other financing.
Ressources
1 Practice Abstracts
The Inagh EIP is designed to deliver a new approach to address the joint concerns of biodiversity and habitat loss and concurrently the loss of high ecological status water bodies in the Upper Inagh River Catchment by developing farming for nature and catchment sensitive farming and forestry practices. The overall aim is to demonstrate that biodiversity loss can be minimised, and site-specific mitigation measures can be implemented by farmers, scientists and advisors working together on a catchment scale.
The Inagh EIP formally started on the 1st September 2021 and will have a 12-month implementation please in the form a locally-led collaborative partnership, with farmers centrally involved in the co-design and implementation of an innovative suite of measures. The Inagh EIP consortium includes numerous stakeholders (local farmers; local forestry owners, the IFA, Clare County Council, Inland Fisheries Ireland, Waterford Institute of Technology, ASSAP and others) who have extensive expertise in managing and delivering collaborative projects focused on farming for conservation, biodiversity enhancement and ‘Woodlands For Water’ and forestry for nature type projects. The Inagh EIP will support local farmers, forestry owners and members of the local community to address the challenge of biodiversity loss and will work to enhance habitat connectivity in the Upper Inagh River catchment. The operational area of the Inagh EIP is located in the parishes of Kilmaley and Inagh in West Clare. The dominant agricultural activity is suckler and beef farming, together with forestry (consisting mainly of Sitka spruce plantations).
The Inagh EIP is designed to deliver a new approach to address the joint concerns of biodiversity and habitat loss and concurrently the loss of high ecological status water bodies in the Upper Inagh River Catchment by developing farming for nature and catchment sensitive farming and forestry practices. The overall aim is to demonstrate that biodiversity loss can be minimised, and site-specific mitigation measures can be implemented by farmers, scientists and advisors working together on a catchment scale.
The Inagh EIP formally started on the 1st September 2021 and will have a 12-month implementation please in the form a locally-led collaborative partnership, with farmers centrally involved in the co-design and implementation of an innovative suite of measures. The Inagh EIP consortium includes numerous stakeholders (local farmers; local forestry owners, the IFA, Clare County Council, Inland Fisheries Ireland, Waterford Institute of Technology, ASSAP and others) who have extensive expertise in managing and delivering collaborative projects focused on farming for conservation, biodiversity enhancement and ‘Woodlands For Water’ and forestry for nature type projects. The Inagh EIP will support local farmers, forestry owners and members of the local community to address the challenge of biodiversity loss and will work to enhance habitat connectivity in the Upper Inagh River catchment. The operational area of the Inagh EIP is located in the parishes of Kilmaley and Inagh in West Clare. The dominant agricultural activity is suckler and beef farming, together with forestry (consisting mainly of Sitka spruce plantations).
Contacts
Project coordinator
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River Catchment Management Ecosystem Services (RCMES) Ltd
Project coordinator
Project partners
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Brain Harvey
Project partner
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Congella McGuire
Project partner
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Dermot Houlihan
Project partner
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Jane Gilleran
Project partner
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John Geraghty
Project partner
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Ragna Gruendler
Project partner
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Ruairí Ó Conchúir
Project partner
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Terry O’Mahony
Project partner