Fear of facts
Opinion
by Corey Goodman
Point Reyes Light, December 5, 2013
When
I was a student at Stanford, one of the things I enjoyed most was the
way scientists debated facts. No claim could be made without data to
back it up, and all data were subject to robust scrutiny and examined
for holes and errors. That was how we were taught to seek truth. We were
encouraged to ask tough questions, and were taught that science is just
as much about disproving old hypotheses as deriving new ones. It was
the same culture of science I taught to my students throughout my
career.
Thus
it came as a shock when, nearly 40 years later, I first got involved in
the oyster farm debate and discovered that none of the National Park
Service scientists or their local supporters wanted to discuss the data.
At Supervisor Steve Kinsey’s request, I examined that data. As I
reported at the county hearing on May 8, 2007, the data did not support
their accusations.
At
that same hearing, Dr. Sarah Allen made her infamous 80 percent claim—
that harbor seals were down 80 percent at one location due to the oyster
farm. The next day I did what any scientist would do: I wrote and asked
her to share the data and methods on which she had based the claim. She
never replied.
By
that point I had been a practicing scientist for more than 30 years and
was an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences. Never in my
career had I written such a request and not received an answer. As a
result, I did something I had never before done: I submitted a Freedom
of Information Act request. I didn’t know how to do it; my friend Mark
Dowie taught me.
Then
I got another surprise. Park Service Regional Director Jon Jarvis
responded and refused to share the data. He even refused to reveal the
location at which the 80 percent decline occurred. Later, in the summer
of 2007, Senator Dianne Feinstein instructed Mr. Jarvis to give me the
data. He did so, and my analysis was clear: the 80 percent decline took
place in the wilderness area, far from the oyster farm. When park
scientists continued to refuse to talk, I published my findings in this
newspaper.
For
several years afterward, park supporters publicly said I was wrong. Dr.
Allen remained silent. Finally, in 2010, nearly three years after she
made her claim, Dr. Allen retracted it.
Since
2007, the park and its supporters have continued to make erroneous
claims of environmental harm by the oyster farm, and as each claim is
debunked, they abandon it and move on to a new accusation.
At
first their focus was harbor seal disturbances. Those claims were put
to rest when Dr. Brent Stewart, the marine mammal expert hired by the
park to analyze the hundreds of thousands of secret photographs taken of
seals and oyster boats, found “no evidence of disturbance.”
One
supporter, Dr. Sylvia Earle, evidently hasn’t read Dr. Stewart’s
report. Earlier this year, she wrote to the federal court that “seals
are being disturbed” by oyster boats. I wrote to her several times and
asked to discuss the data. She never replied.
Park
supporters have also focused on impacts to eelgrass, but according to
the National Academy, eelgrass coverage has doubled in Drakes Estero in
recent years. In the environmental impact statement, the focus was on
soundscape, but that too was shown to be bogus.
Beginning
in 2013, attention shifted to the colonial tunicate Didemnum vexillum,
or Dvex. The first thing that should make you suspicious is that park
supporters call the organism “marine vomit.” A Google Scholar search
shows that serious scientists don’t use such words in their
publications. A Google search shows that Amy Trainer of the
Environmental Action Committee and her colleagues have used it. It also
appears on a website called Street Carnage, under the headline “Marine
vomit attacks British coast.” That website has a photo of Clint Eastwood
with a rifle pointed at a poster of “Archie Bunker for President” on
its home page.
Dvex
is an invasive tunicate that colonizes bays and estuaries throughout
the temperate waters of the world, from Venice Lagoon to the New Zealand
coast. It was observed in Drakes Estero a decade ago, and has been
found in San Francisco Bay, Half Moon Bay, Monterey Bay, Elkhorn Slough,
Morro Bay, Tomales Bay, Humbolt Bay, Port San Luis and Bodega Bay.
According
to the National Academy, Dvex and other “non-indigenous species” are
present in Drakes Estero, their “avenue of introduction is mostly
unknown” and they “appear to be much less conspicuous than in nearby San
Francisco Bay.” (Dvex most likely first washed into Drakes Estero in
the tides.) Thus, there is nothing surprising about Dvex in Drakes
Estero, given its worldwide distribution and appearance up and down the
California coast.
Dvex
was also reported on eelgrass at both Martha’s Vineyard and Tomales
Bay. In 2011, Dr. Ted Grosholz reported it on eelgrass in Drakes Estero.
But
in 2013, as other claims of harm were disproven, park supporters
sounded a note of alarm about Dvex. In January and October 2013, Jude
Stalker, at the request of EAC, studied Dvex in Drakes Estero. She
called it “marine vomit” in a letter to EAC, suggesting advocacy, not
science. Ms. Stalker ended by writing “please do not hesitate to contact
me with questions.” I did just that, contacting her four times, asking
to discuss her data. She never replied.
Ms.
Stalker found Dvex on some eelgrass in one arm of Drakes Estero, in
essentially the same location where Dr. Grosholz found it in 2011. There
is no reason to conclude that anything has changed, or that Drakes
Estero is more imperiled by this tunicate than any other bay along the
California coast or around the world.
Seven years into this debate, the pattern is clear: I keep offering to discuss the data—a normal part of the scientific process—and people on the other side steadfastly refuse. This, to me, is evidence that they are advocates and not scientists. As the court case moves forward, expect more alarming claims. But don’t expect them to have any more merit than the many previous false, and retracted, claims. Science, after all, is about debate and discourse, not twisting facts to fit a preconceived ideology. Scientists have three words for such behavior: fear of facts.
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