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Scientists reject owl plan.


Byline: The Register-Guard

The Bush administration's efforts to reduce protections for the Northern spotted owl The Northern Spotted Owl, Strix occidentalis caurina, is one of three Spotted Owl subspecies. A Western North American bird in the family Strigidae, genus Strix, it is a medium-sized dark brown owl sixteen to nineteen inches in length and one to one and one sixth pounds.  in order to bring back widespread clear-cut logging in A colloquial term for the process of making the initial record of the names of individuals who have been brought to the police station upon their arrest.

The process of logging in is also called booking.
 Western Oregon's old growth forests have been dealt a well deserved reversal.

The administration proposes lifting restrictions on logging in 23 percent of the land now designated as critical habitat for the owl, citing research indicating that spotted owls do not necessarily require vast tracts of old growth habitat, The proposal also is based on the premise that the invasion of the barred owl represents a more significant threat to spotted owls than the loss of habitat.

So far, scientists aren't impressed. Two highly regarded scientific organizations hired by the administration to review the plan have concluded that the government failed to consider the best available science, a cornerstone requirement of the Endangered Species Act The federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) (16 U.S.C.A. §§ 1531 et seq.) was enacted to protect animal and plant species from extinction by preserving the ecosystems in which they survive and by providing programs for their conservation. , before making room for increased logging in old growth forests.

The proposed recovery plan lies at the heart of the administration's push to increase logging on federal Bureau of Land Management lands and to restore timber revenue to rural counties throughout the Northwest. It's also part of an ongoing push by the administration to roll back habitat protections, while ramping up logging, oil and gas drilling, mining and other natural resource extraction activities on public lands throughout the West.

The groups that reviewed the plan, the Society for Conservation Biology The Society for Conservation Biology (SCB) is an international professional organization dedicated to promoting the scientific study of the phenomena that affect the maintenance, loss, and restoration of biological diversity.  and the American Ornithologists' Union The American Ornithologists' Union (AOU) an ornithological organization in the USA. Unlike the National Audubon Society, its members are primarily professional ornithologists rather than amateur birders. , said there is a scientific consensus that the administration's plans not only would fail to bring back owl populations, but would result in downgrading the specie's status from threatened to endangered. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, it would send the owl flapping further down the flight path to extinction.

"The recovery team failed to make use of the best available science and, in fact, appears to have selectively cited from the available science to justify a reduction in habitat protection," the reviewers wrote. They added that the administration placed "far too much emphasis" on the threat posed by expansion of barred owl range into spotted owl habitat.

Lest anyone think these scientific organizations are out of touch with their peers, the plans also were reviewed independently by The Wildlife Society, a leading professional organization of wildlife biologists '''

The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
A wildlife biologist is someone who studies wild animals and their habitats.
. The society declared that the recovery plan is fundamentally flawed - so severely that it should be jettisoned and an entirely new one developed.

"We are drawn to the conclusion that (the recovery plan) will not achieve the basic interest of spotted owl conservation," the society pointedly noted. "We come to this conclusion because the spotted owl is one of the most studied species ever listed under the Endangered Species Act, yet there is no reliance on this plan on the breadth and depth of the information available to create a scientifically credible plan."

It's a familiar theme for an administration that has never shown the slightest hesitation to politicize po·lit·i·cize  
v. po·lit·i·cized, po·lit·i·ciz·ing, po·lit·i·ciz·es

v.intr.
To engage in or discuss politics.

v.tr.
 scientific decisions, whether they involve mercury emissions from power plants, salmon survival in the Klamath Basin The Klamath Basin is the region in the U.S. states of Oregon and California drained by the Klamath River. It contains most of Klamath County and parts of Lake and Jackson Counties in Oregon, and parts of Del Norte, Humboldt, Modoc, Siskiyou, and Trinity Counties in California.  - or the future of Oregon's remaining old growth forests.

There is a compelling need to increase logging on the 2.5 million acres of public forests in Western Oregon This article is about the region of Western Oregon. For the University, see Western Oregon University.
Western Oregon is a geographical term that is generally taken to apply to the portion of the state of Oregon that is west of the Cascade Range.
. Frustratingly, the BLM BLM n abbr (US) (= Bureau of Land Management) → les domaines  and Forest Service have been unable to meet timber production targets under the Northwest Forest Plan.

The plan, created in 1994 to settle a lawsuit brought by environmental groups, revised U.S. Forest Service and BLM management plans to scale back logging by more than 80 percent in order to protect habitat for spotted owls and other species. Under terms of a settlement with the timber industry and counties three years ago, the federal government agreed to review its designation of critical habitat and to increase timber harvests.

But those goals can be accomplished without putting the spotted owl at heightened risk of extinction and without bringing back clear-cut logging in old growth forests.

The Bush administration should scrap its fatally flawed spotted owl recovery plan and create a new one that can pass the science sniff test.
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Title Annotation:Editorials; The Bush administration plan flunks peer review
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Aug 17, 2007
Words:664
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