Jose M. Fariñas-Franco
@drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
2.3K followers 1.2K following 33 posts
Marine ecologist working with biogenic habitat forming species: horse mussels, oysters, seaweed, seagrass. Conservation and Restoration. Lecturer at ATU Galway. Dad of two. Diver.
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Reposted by Jose M. Fariñas-Franco
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
One week left to apply to this postdoc opportunity I'm offering in native oyster restoration in Ireland. Get your applications in before the 9th May 12 pm deadline! Any questions contact me. Details in the application documents, link below.
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
#jobalert 📢 Delighted to offer a 3-year postdoctoral position in my research group at ATU Galway, Ireland. This is an exciting role in the new and ambitious native oyster reef restoration #BRICONS Project funded by the Marine Institute. To apply www.atu.ie/connect/jobs....
Deadline: 9 May 2025 12pm
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
#jobalert 📢 Delighted to offer a 3-year postdoctoral position in my research group at ATU Galway, Ireland. This is an exciting role in the new and ambitious native oyster reef restoration #BRICONS Project funded by the Marine Institute. To apply www.atu.ie/connect/jobs....
Deadline: 9 May 2025 12pm
Reposted by Jose M. Fariñas-Franco
davidho.bsky.social
🧵Commercial fishing is the most damaging thing we do to the ocean. In addition to killing lots of fish and other organisms, it also kills >300k dauphins and whales annually.

For a fishing company to oppose research on marine CO₂ removal because it might harm the environment is ironic. 1/n 🌊
Reposted by Jose M. Fariñas-Franco
nessocon.bsky.social
We are looking for a #PhD student to work on the impacts of multiple stressors on native #oysters as part of the BRICONS Project co-supervised by @annikaclements.bsky.social - contact me for details on how to apply @tcddublin.bsky.social
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
It's a cracking place Dan, serendipitously came across it looking for an oyster bank. A mosaic of really great maerl and dense seagrass, and plenty of clams/tapes and ostrea eilis shell. It is in Cuan Chasla, Conamara, co.Galway. Very shallow at low water like most of these bays,but still subtidal.
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
In the biogenic habitats lab we also get to study Irish seagrass beds, from some of the deepest ones in Europe down in Kerry (1st), to rich mosaic seagrass-oyster-maerl biotopes in Conamara (2nd) to almost urban seagrass meadows near Galway city (3rd and 4th picture ).
#worldseagrassday
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Left: Sparse Modiolus modiolus bed in Scapa Flow, Orkney, May 2014.
Right: Native oyster bed in the Galway coast, Ireland, February 2024
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Old habits are hard to break and I have defaulted to the old site for posting lately. I need to transition proper and will start posting more here. I'll start with news of two successful collaborative project proposals for shellfish reef restoration projects due to start in 2025. Cue these photos 👇
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Thanks @ruththurstan.bsky.social! delighted to see two of those photos 👇 in yesterday's BBC Wildlife Magazine piece. I am hopeful too, hopeful they'll receive the protection they need as the last pockets of a lost habitat, clinging here in Ireland. We are documenting them also in case we lose them.
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
More BRUV footage with unexpected species. Following that Atlantic salmon, here we have a pair of common squid (Loligo vulgaris) gliding in front of the camera. The footage is part of our ongoing study of fish utilisation of seaweed farms but as it happens there is a #seagrass meadow nearby.
Reposted by Jose M. Fariñas-Franco
rmcelreath.bsky.social
Nice to see this article by @mbaldwin.bsky.social surface again. Lots of academics aren't aware how recent and dynamic the peer-review system is. Entire thing worth a read, but this quote always floors me (page 8 of PDF ethos.lps.library.cmu.edu/article/19/g... ):
At the American weekly Science, for instance,
the Editorial Board handled all refereeing in-house for the first half of the twentieth century.
In the 1950s, however, members of the editorial board complained that “the job of refereeing
and suggesting revisions for hundreds of technical papers is neither the best use of their
time nor pleasant, satisfying work,” and agreed to begin sending papers to outside experts.22
Similarly, when the American Journal of Medicine was founded in 1946, its editor Alexander
Gutman wanted to offer his authors fast publication and decided to handle acceptances and
rejections almost entirely on his own. However, as the journal became more popular,
Gutman was unable to keep up with the number of submissions, and by the 1960s he too
had begun sending papers out for external opinions.
Reposted by Jose M. Fariñas-Franco
jangeerthiddink.bsky.social
Are you interested in the #restoration of marine ecosystems?

I'm co-chairing a @icesmarine.bsky.social Workshop on Nature Restoration (WKREST) in March, join if you're interested!

www.ices.dk/community/gr...
WKREST
www.ices.dk
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Hi Grant, I'd like to be added as well. We use BRUVs for fish use in reef habitats and seaweed farms, in addition to old school, direct recording via diving (photoquadrats and videotransects with DSLRs and GoPros). Dabbing into biotope mapping with fancier drop cameras and acoustics (sidescan).
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Muchas gracias Ángel, me alegra formar parte del grupo
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Photo is from quite a deep (for seagrass) subtidal bed in southwest Ireland, September 2018 if I remember correctly.
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Could I be added to the pack, Angel? Gracias!
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
It's not just shellfish reefs we study in my group, I have a lot of love for seagrass. A new found, serendipitous love as a result of a completely different project on seaweed farming. Some of the nicest dives I have ever done are on seagrass beds. Esp. summer, with all the juvenile fish thriving.
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
Hi Caleb, can you point them out in the photo? The only colonial cnidarians we find are hydroids and some dead mans fingers but can't see them in that photo, at least I can't. There are red filamentous and red crustose algae (maerl) in that pic. But I wouldn't say those are the ones you refer to?
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
The seagrass is also quite something.
drjosemfarinas.bsky.social
It's fantastic Ben, a very special mosaic habitat indeed, with native oysters, seagrass and maerl (both Phymatolithon and Lithothamnion). West coast of Ireland. Not going to go into too many specifics location wise.