Chris Barry

Chris Barry

About

24
Publications
6,614
Reads
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535
Citations
Additional affiliations
May 2018 - present
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
Position
  • Biogeochemist
March 2006 - July 2016
Agri Food and Biosciences Institute
Position
  • Limnologist
Education
September 2000 - July 2003
Queen Mary University of London
Field of study
  • Marine & Freshwater Biology

Publications

Publications (24)
Article
Full-text available
Lowland waters in Northern Ireland experience elevated agricultural phosphorus (P) inputs, and in response a variety of control measures targeting farm nutrient management have been implemented. Their efficacy in lowering nitrogen (N) and P exports and improving water quality is examined in 40 headwater streams from 1990 to 2009, and to 2014 for 24...
Article
Full-text available
Organic soils are widespread in Ireland and vulnerable to degradation via drainage for agriculture. The soil-landuse combination of pasture on organic soils may play a disproportionate role in regional C dynamics but is yet to receive study. Fluvial C fluxes and labile organic fractions were determined for two such sites at nested field (c.4 ha) an...
Article
Full-text available
Temperate grasslands on organic soils are diverse due to edaphic properties but also to regional management practices and this heterogeneity is reflected in the wide range of greenhouse gas (GHG) flux values reported in the literature. In Ireland, most grasslands on organic soils were drained several decades ago and are managed as extensive pasture...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Seagrass sediments are important ‘blue carbon’ reservoirs which store climatically significant quantities of organic carbon (Corg) at the global scale. Seagrass meadows that overly these sediments also provide a range of critical ecosystem services including shoreline stabilization, storm surge protection, and fisheries nursery grounds...
Preprint
Full-text available
Reservoirs collectively contribute 1–2 percent of global man-made greenhouse gas emissions, although their individual emissions can vary widely. Reservoir emission models have considerably advanced our understanding of the lifetime carbon impacts of reservoirs globally and inherently, offer means to inform judicious planning of new investments. The...
Preprint
Full-text available
Reservoirs collectively contribute 1-2% of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, although individual emissions can vary widely. While emission models have considerably advanced our understanding of the lifetime carbon impacts of reservoirs globally and offer means to inform judicious planning, their widespread adoption is hindered by high...
Article
Full-text available
Riparian tree canopies are key components of river systems, and influence the provision of many essential ecosystem services. Their management provides the potential for substantial control of the downstream persistence of pollutants. The recent advent of new advances in mass spectrometry to detect a large suite of emerging contaminants, high-frequ...
Article
Full-text available
Accurate knowledge of the spatial extent of seagrass habitats is essential for monitoring and management purposes given their ecological and economic significance. Extent data are typically presented in binary (presence/absence) or arbitrary, semi-quantitative density bands derived from low-resolution satellite imagery, which cannot resolve fine-sc...
Article
Full-text available
Seagrass habitats are ecologically valuable and play an important role in sequestering and storing carbon. There is, thus, a need to estimate seagrass percentage cover in diverse environments in support of climate change mitigation, marine spatial planning and coastal zone management. In situ approaches are accurate but time-consuming, expensive an...
Article
Full-text available
Land‐ocean dissolved organic matter (DOM) transport is a significant and changing term in global biogeochemical cycles which is increasing as a result of human perturbation, including land‐use change. Knowledge of the behavior and fate of transported DOM is lacking, particularly in the tropics and subtropics where land‐use change is occurring rapid...
Article
Full-text available
The dissolved organic carbon (DOC) export from land to ocean via rivers is a significant term in the global C cycle, and has been modified in many areas by human activity. DOC exports from large global rivers are fairly well quantified, but those from smaller river systems, including those draining oceanic regions, are generally under-represented i...
Article
Full-text available
The transport of dissolved organic matter (DOM) across the land-ocean-aquatic-continuum (LOAC), from freshwater to the ocean, is an important yet poorly understood component of the global carbon budget. Exploring and quantifying this flux is a significant challenge given the complexities of DOM cycling across these contrasting environments. We deve...
Article
Full-text available
Arctic lakes are poised for substantial changes to their carbon (C) cycles in the near future. Autochthonous processes in lakes which consume inorganic C and create biomass that can be sequestered in sediments are accompanied by allochthonous inputs of organic matter from the surrounding watershed. Both C sources can be mineralized and degassed as...
Article
Full-text available
Prediction of high latitude response to climate change is hampered by poor understanding of the role of nonlinear changes in ecosystem forcing and response. While the effects of nonlinear climate change are often delayed or dampened by internal ecosystem dynamics, recent warming events in the Arctic have driven rapid environmental response, raising...
Article
Full-text available
The Kangerlussuaq area of southwest Greenland encompasses diverse ecological, geomorphic, and climate gradients that function over a range of spatial and temporal scales. Ecosystems range from the microbial communities on the ice sheet and moisture-stressed terrestrial vegetation (and their associated herbivores) to freshwater and oligosaline lakes...
Article
Across a small geographic area (<180 km), the region of South-West Greenland covers a natural climate gradient.Variation in temperature and precipitation result in marked differences in limnology at three discrete locations: ice sheet margin, inland, and the coast. Replicate lakes from each location were sampled for physical (temperature, light), c...
Article
Full-text available
Temperate grasslands on organic soils are diverse due to edaphic properties but also to regional management practices and this heterogeneity is reflected in the wide range of greenhouse gas (GHG) flux values reported in the literature. In Ireland, most grasslands on organic soils were drained several decades ago and are managed as extensive pasture...
Article
14C as a tool to trace terrestrial carbon in a complex lake system: implications for food-web structure and carbon cycling
Article
Debate around the likelihood of achieving full compliance with Water Framework Directive objectives by 2027 has largely focused on the uncertainty in the lag-times between the implementation of mitigation measures and improvements in water quality. This paper examines uncertainties related to limited knowledge, predictability and ambiguity and thei...

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