Dru Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 Objections at OSU to a graduate student's research on forest recovery ignite a scholarly dustup Friday, January 20, 2006 MICHAEL MILSTEIN The Oregonian A contingent of professors at Oregon State University's College of Forestry want the nation's top scientific journal to withhold a study by an OSU graduate student who found that forests best recover from wildfires when they are not logged and left alone. The issue of the journal Science including the study is due out today, and Donald Kennedy, its top editor, said there is no chance the research will be suppressed. "They're trying to rewind history," said Kennedy, former president of Stanford University who now is a professor emeritus of environmental science and policy there. The OSU graduate student, Daniel Donato, 29, led researchers in examining lands burned by the 2002 Biscuit wildfire in Southwest Oregon, where the Bush administration and others at OSU had promoted logging as a means of restoring forests quickly. Donato's team concluded logging slows forest recovery. OSU's College of Forestry, which has close ties to the timber industry and receives about 10 percent of its funding from a tax on logging, was immediately and sharply divided. As they do with all studies, Science editors had independent scientists review Donato's research before deciding to publish it. Kennedy on Thursday said the OSU professors, who contend the research is misleading, can respond to the study once it's published. "That's the way scientists handle disputes, not by censorship," Kennedy said. The step is the latest in an extraordinary dispute, entwined in the heated politics of Northwest logging and spilling out from a normally quiet academia. Many professors aspire all their lives to publish research in Science, and for an OSU graduate student to do so is a rare achievement. Other scientists inside and outside OSU said they have rarely if ever heard of an attempt by professors to hold back such research, especially when it comes from their college. They said the attempt raises questions about academic freedom and conflicts of interest within the College of Forestry. "One has to notice and acknowledge the courage of a graduate student to do research and publish findings that run against the norm," said Kathleen Dean Moore, a distinguished professor of philosophy at OSU who teaches environmental ethics. "The university isn't about secrecy, it's about discussion. It's about hearing all the voices so we can learn from them." James Karr, a professor of fisheries and biology at the University of Washington who has criticized logging after fires, said he is "appalled at the way this is playing out." He said the turmoil is having a chilling effect on other OSU researchers. Neither OSU President Ed Ray nor Provost Sabah Randhawa would discuss the situation. The furor has engulfed the prominent dean of the College of Forestry, Hal Salwasser, who has testified in favor of a congressional bill that would accelerate logging after fires. The bill is co-sponsored by U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, a Republican representing Eastern Oregon who leads a congressional subcommittee on forests. A memo to faculty Salwasser sent a memo to faculty questioning conclusions of the research paper, first released Jan. 5 in Science's online edition. Donato's team, including five other scientists from OSU and the U.S. Forest Service, found that logging after the Biscuit fire destroyed seedlings growing on their own and had littered the ground with highly flammable tinder. They said such cutting "can be counterproductive to goals of forest regeneration and fuel reduction." The finding called into question the traditional approach of salvaging burned trees and planting seedlings. While provoking timber industry outrage, it deepened a rift within the College of Forestry, where John Sessions, a distinguished professor of forest engineering, and Professor Emeritus Michael Newton had authored a report suggesting aggressive logging to restore forests after the Biscuit blaze. Their report caused the U.S. Forest Service, backed by the Bush administration, to expand its logging plans. Asking for a delay Sessions and Newton were immediately critical of Donato's research. They and seven other professors and scientists from OSU, along with the Forest Service, took the unusual step of asking the Science editors to delay publication of the study until it addresses their criticisms. Alternatively, they asked that their concerns be included in a letter accompanying the study. They said the study, occupying one page of the journal, draws sweeping conclusions about salvage logging not backed up by the few years of research since the blaze. The true test of efforts to restore forests will be how well seedlings survive into future decades. The limited research described so far "contributes no new science," they said in a letter to the journal. They maintained the journal's process of peer review failed to detect the flaws. "We believe that this article damages the institution of peer-reviewed science, and is inconsistent with the quality of articles we expect from Science," they wrote. "We believe that the peer review process failed as a quality control measure in this case." Stem cell research Their assertions emerge just a few weeks after Science faced criticism for failing to catch fraudulent South Korea-based stem cell research. But the journal's review process is among the most rigorous nationwide. "There was no failure of peer review in this case," said Kennedy, the editor-in-chief of the Donato study. "I'm sorry they don't like the outcome, but I think they have a misplaced case here." Salwasser said he had reviewed a draft of the letter to Science and asked the authors to make changes, which they did. He said he agreed that Donato's paper went too far in its conclusions but disagreed with the attempt to hold it out of Science. "I never thought that was a good idea, but I didn't think I could step in and tell my faculty to do something or not do something without infringing on their academic freedom," Salwasser said. "I sure as heck don't feel good about how this has all unfolded," he said. Filling the vacuum James Agee, a professor of forest ecology at the University of Washington, said the Science study helps fill the vacuum of research on logging after fires, but he noted weaknesses. It should more clearly state that the conditions in Southwest Oregon may not apply everywhere else, he said. "We have such little information about salvage logging that it's an important piece," he said. "But it has to be put in the appropriate place, and the authors didn't do that." At the same time, he said, the OSU critics "have lost a little perspective on this." Donato works under Beverly Law, an associate professor in the College of Forestry and the senior author of the research paper. Law declined to comment. Donato said the authors stand behind their study and believe any response to their work should undergo the same scrutiny and review that their research did. The paper's final version deletes one controversial sentence that appeared in the online version: "The results presented here suggest that postfire logging may conflict with ecosystem recovery goals." How about something less controversial next - the effect of beer on loggers maybe? Quote
PhilomathSloth Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 Wow!! I am surprised that Sessions went to the extent that he did, I wouldnt expect that from him. Where did you see this article Dru? Quote
PhilomathSloth Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 duh. the f'in oregonian, I'm retarded....sorry born and raised in Spokane Quote
Kitergal Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 umm...did you guys actually read all that?? Quote
olyclimber Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 i thinks its about Homeland security using mind control techniques on academia. Quote
cj001f Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 Ahhh... Oregon, a good little banana republic. Quote
jon Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 Part of it has to do they are pissed that a grad student is first authoring a paper in Science. A Science publication can make your career, it is the premier journal to get published in. Quote
foraker Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 That is pretty unusual. On the one hand, it could just be the professors being political and not wanting to bite the hand that feeds them (kinda like the US climate science community) or it could be that the Science editors actually did ignore criticisms by the the reviewers. It kind of sounds like there's a bit of both going on here. Quote
foraker Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 One article in Science isn't going to 'make your career'. It might get people to notice you but if the original ideas were your advisor's and you don't have a lot of good ones of your own then that funding teat is going to dry up pretty quickly. Quote
Dru Posted January 20, 2006 Author Posted January 20, 2006 duh. the f'in oregonian, I'm retarded....sorry born and raised in Spokane I didn't actually read the Oregonian though - I got it off a mailing list. Quote
Mike_Gauthier Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 i thinks its about Homeland security using mind control techniques on academia. Homeland security employs feeble mind control techniques at best. They are absolutely no match for the dark side. Careful Yoda... Quote
tomtom Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 Nature is the premiere science journal. Science is fishwrap. Quote
Geek_the_Greek Posted January 20, 2006 Posted January 20, 2006 [Tree geek hat on] It's true that the article went a bit far in drawing sweeping conclusions from a limited dataset. You can't write a one-pager titled "Post-wildfire logging hinders regeneration and increases fire risk" and not expect a lot of scrutiny into what you did. What all parties need to remember is that ecology is a science of place - what applies to one area may or may not apply elsewhere... [tree geek hat off] Quote
Chriznitch Posted January 21, 2006 Posted January 21, 2006 some comments: -the Biscuit report simply explains the economic effects according to various delays in salvage logging. It does not "suggest" anything. Unfortunately few people have actually read it before critiquing. -the conclusions made in the Donato study are based on short term, graduate student timelines. Are we concerned about immediate impacts of active management or the long-term enhancement of the destroyed stand? -we all knew that the area was going to burn catastrophically when it was "preserved" Quote
curtveld Posted January 21, 2006 Posted January 21, 2006 On the one hand, it could just be the professors being political and not wanting to bite the hand that feeds them (kinda like the US climate science community) or it could be that the Science editors actually did ignore criticisms by the the reviewers. It kind of sounds like there's a bit of both going on here. Yup. Reading the letter of concern from the OSU profs (some of whom I studied with years ago) convinced me that Donato’s paper has some serious shortcomings and/or overstatements, and I wonder whether Science either a) got reviewers poorly qualified to evaluate this particular study or b) ignored their input, as Foraker suggested. That being said, the draconian request to delay printing is clearly motivated much more by political and economical sensitivities than by any serious risk to the science. The decision to go this route rather than submitting a response to Science following publication is very poor form. These profs have decades of research insight behind them, but need to rest the old-guard antics and let some new voices inform the discussion. Quote
PhilomathSloth Posted January 22, 2006 Posted January 22, 2006 After talking to some more folks about this issue, I learned a little bit about how Donato did this research. After the fire, they re-planted a site, waited, then salvaged the fire damaged timber. Then came to the conclusion that salvage operations were detrimental to the seedlings resulting in high mortality compared to sites that were left alone. I think one issue to point out in particular to the Biscuit fire, is that salvage operations didnt take place until a couple years after the fire. Im not saying I agree with all salvage operations, but its difficult to come to the broad conclusions that Donato did under these circumstances. Quote
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