Ireland is investing in international marine science research projects on fish health, honey bees and animal welfare.
Minister for Agriculture Martin Heydon TD and Minister of State for Research and Innovation Noel Grealish TD have announced €837,000 in funding for three projects under EU and US-Ireland research schemes. Two awards were made through the US-Ireland Research and Development Partnership 2024 Call.
Dr Anne Parle-McDermott of Dublin City University will receive €349,500 for a project titled Environmental RNA-based Assessment of Fish Health (eRNA-Fish).
Dr Grace McCormack from the University of Galway secured €345,541 for Sustainable Ways to Advance Reproductive Management in Honey Bees (SWARM).
“These projects show the diverse areas we support in public research,” said Minister Heydon. “The international collaboration is especially welcome.”
Minister Grealish added: “This partnership fosters collaboration between Ireland, Northern Ireland and the US. I commend both successful projects.” A third award, under the European Partnership on Animal Health and Welfare (EUPAH&W), allocates €142,000 to Dr Siobhan Mullanin of University College Dublin.
Her project, HoliWell, will use emotion and deep learning to assess animal welfare. Minister Grealish also announced Irish support for two upcoming European research calls. These include the second EUPAH&W call and a Knowledge Hub initiative from the Healthy Diet Healthy Life (HDHL) EU Research Initiative.
“These calls offer vital opportunities,” said the Minister. “They strengthen national capacity, attract funding, and support strategies like Food Vision 2030 and the forthcoming Animal Welfare Strategy 2026–2030.”


















































