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What s under our feet? Ground-breaking study of Dublin s soil and biodiversity this summer

As part of our Dublin City Biodiversity Action Plan, Dublin City Council will support the Tellus Survey, which is being carried out by the Geological Survey of Ireland. For the next 6 weeks sampling teams will visit over 800 sites in Dublin City to collect soil and vegetation samples. Leslie Moore, Head of Parks Services, stated “ For the first time, we will be able to get a good picture of what the soils of Dublin City are – our natural resources that we depend upon for biodiversity, growing food, storing water, pollutants and carbon and giving life to the City. Dublin City Council welcomes the opportunity to support this landmark study”.

€10 5m EPA research will have strong agricultural focus

May 24, 2021 2:44 pm Agricultural impacts on the environment, reducing plastic waste, the circular economy and edible packaging are just some of the topics that will be explored under a new €10.5 million research programme by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA is calling for proposals under 46 topics, as part of a new 10-year framework of research from 2021-2030. EPA research co-funded This research call is co-funded by a number of stakeholders, including the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM), the Department of Transport (DoT), Geological Survey Ireland (GSI), and the Office of the Planning Regulator. 14 of the 46 research topics are co-funded by the DAFM, with one of these jointly funded by the DoT, and close to €4.5 million will go towards DAFM-related projects.

Sentinel-2 Satellite-derived Bathymetry in Optically Complex Waters

Dublin Bay Case Study May 12, 2021 Coastal areas are highly dynamic environments that are subject to diverse pressures, both anthropogenic (e.g. urban development, fishing, habitat modification) and natural (e.g. storms, erosion, floods). These pressures result in intensive and frequent seafloor alterations that demand efficient monitoring methodologies for repetitive updating of the seafloor morphology and bathymetry. Bathymetric information is essential in many coastal aspects, including environmental, management, research and economic. Optical satellite data provides an efficient alternative to bathymetric derivation in shallow coastal waters (

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