Wales

 

ECT Media

Podcast with Steve Ormerod

Webinar featuring Steve Ormerod “Forty Years of Research at the Llyn Brianne Stream Catchments in Wales”

 

Impacts

Scientific:

How land use affects acidification

Recovery from acidification

Policy:

Emissions control to reduce acidification

Forest & riparian woodland management

 

Map of the catchments (enlarge to view)

The study catchments at Llyn Brianne, with geographical position in Wales shown relative to sites in the Welsh Acid Waters Survey. Image figure 1 (pg 166) from Ormerod & Durance (2009).

 

OVERVIEW

Located in the heart of the Cambrian Mountains in mid-Wales, the Llyn Brianne experiment began in 1981 with an investigation into the acidity of the River Twyi. But it has since expanded to include other global changes and their effects on biodiversity, and ecosystem services, particularly climate change.

The landscape scale experiment involves 14 headwater catchments and their streams and has included various manipulations. The Welsh Acid Water Survey conducted in parallel has fed into the analyses.  

Experiment start date: 1981

Habitat type: Freshwater

Experiment type: Climate and restoration/land use change

Site manager: Steve Ormerod and Isabelle Durance

Site owner: Natural Resources Wales, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and various others.

Site size: 14 catchments that vary in size between 15-270 hectares

Experiment conducted by: Steve Ormerod, Cardiff University

Experiment goal: To understand how acidification, land use and warming affect freshwater biodiversity and ecosystem services.

Stakeholders: NERC, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, Welsh Water, RSPB, UKCEH, Imperial College London, Queen Mary University London, National Museum of Cardiff, University of Oxford, Bangor University

Additional links: Llyn Brianne Stream Observatory. Follow @LlynBrianneLTER on Twitter.

 

VISITING

Llyn Brianne can be visited and it is a popular site for various activities, which include cycling, walking, star-gazing, bird watching and fishing. For more information about the reservoir, visiting it and facilities nearby see Visit Mid-Wales.

 
 

ABOUT THE EXPERIMENT

 

Research Updates

Media

Print (6 October 2022): Wales Online published their piece on the consequences of climate change on freshwater species and biodiversity. Steve Ormerod and Ruth Jenkins discuss what these results mean for Welsh waterways.

Radio (13 November 2022): Steve Ormerod was interviewed for BBC Country Focus at Llyn Brianne. You can listen to it via the BBC website from 3.50 into the programme and it will be available until the 13 December 2022.

TV (21 November 2022): The Llyn Brianne project featured on BBC Wales News. Watch the short clip from Steve Ormerod’s Twitter profile.

Print (5 August 2018): The Guardian published their article on the decline of invertebrates over the past 40 years.

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