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To: Thomas M. who wrote (79951)12/13/2001 8:29:22 PM
From: ahhaha  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116753
 
Almost everything they know is based on what someone else told them. Have they checked the validity of all those claims?



To: Thomas M. who wrote (79951)12/17/2001 10:04:58 AM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 116753
 
washingtontimes.com

Rare lynx hairs found in forests exposed as hoax
By Audrey Hudson
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Had the deception not been discovered, the government likely would
have banned many forms of recreation and use of natural resources in the
Gifford Pinchot National Forest and Wenatchee National Forest in Washington
state.
The previously unreported Forest Service investigation found that the
science of the habitat study had been skewed by seven government officials:
three Forest Service employees, two U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
officials and two employees of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
The officials planted three separate samples of Canadian lynx hair on
rubbing posts used to identify existence of the creatures in the two
national forests.
DNA testing of two of the samples matched that of a lynx living
inside an animal preserve. The third DNA sample matched that of an escaped
pet lynx being held in a federal office until its owner retrieved it,
federal officials said.
After the falsified samples were exposed by a Forest Service
colleague, the employees said they were not trying to manipulate or expand
the lynx habitat, but instead were testing the lab's ability to identify
the cat species through DNA analysis, said Joel Holtrop, a Forest Service
official.
"Even if that is the case, it was inappropriate," Mr. Holtrop said.
Forestry officials, conservationists and retired federal officials
said they were outraged that the data were tampered with and said they are
skeptical it was an attempt to test the lab.
"I would find the evil-twin argument more plausible," said Rob
Gordon, executive director of the National Wilderness Institute.
"That would be like bank robbers taking money from a bank and saying
they were just testing the security of a bank, they weren't really stealing
the money. That's beautiful, but I don't think it will fly," Mr. Gordon said.
Retired Fish and Wildlife Service biologist James M. Beers called the
false sampling amazing but not surprising.
"I'm convinced that there is a lot of that going on for so-called
higher purposes," Mr. Beers said.
The employees have been counseled for their actions and banned from
participating in the three-year survey of the lynx, listed as a threatened
animal under the Endangered Species Act. Federal officials would not name
the offending employees, citing privacy concerns.
The lynx listing and habitat study began in 1999 during the Clinton
administration and concludes this year. It was criticized by Westerners as
a political move to impose restrictions on public lands.
Radical environmental groups felt the restrictions didn't go far enough.
To protect the habitat of the felines, roads would have to be closed
to vehicles, and off-road vehicles, snowmobiles, skis and snowshoes would
have been banned. Livestock grazing and tree thinning also would have been
banned.
"It was rigged from the word go; it was full of bad biology and bad
politics," Mr. Beers said. "It gave them [the federal government] carte
blanche to go after ski resorts, stop road building and go after ranchers
and tree cutters."
When the Vail Ski Resort announced an expansion of trails into
possible lynx habitat, the radical animal-rights group Earth Liberation
Front (ELF) torched five buildings and four ski lifts in protest. The Oct.
18, 1998, fire caused $12 million in damage and was the largest act of
eco-terrorism in the United States. No arrests were made, and the statute
of limitations expired in October.
This past summer, ELF planted spikes in hundreds of trees to sabotage
a timber sale and protect the lynx and spotted owls in the Gifford Pinchot
National Forest - one of the forests where the false samples were planted.
This isn't the first time forestry officials have encountered
questionable studies to identify the presence of lynx in the Northwest.
In 1999, a scientist hired by the federal government submitted lynx
hair samples supposedly found in the Oregon Cascades, farther south than
where the animals were thought to exist, said Chris West, spokesman for the
American Forest Resource Council.
Federal officials spent thousands of hours and tens of thousands of
dollars trying to duplicate the finding but found no evidence of the creatures.
The hairs were never validated, the samples were thrown out, and the
contractor was never paid, Mr. West said.
"These are cases of rogue biologists trying to influence
natural-resources policy," Mr. West said.
"There has clearly been some shenanigans going on here," he said of
the false sampling in Washington.
Forest Service officials say this year's errant sampling was caught
and therefore did not affect the integrity of the sample survey.
"We have looked at it carefully and feel the overall integrity of the
sampling effort is in place, and the ongoing results will have valid
scientific and sound results," said Heidi Valetkevitch, Forest Service
spokeswoman.
However, the incident has damaged the integrity of the federal
agencies within their own ranks and in the communities they serve.
"It destroys the credibility of the hard work we are trying to do to
track these animals," said one retired Forest Service employee.
Mr. Gordon said the false sampling aggravates an already distrustful
relationship between Westerners and the federal government.
"This revelation makes all the projects these offices and individuals
were involved in suspect, and may merit review," Mr. Gordon said.