Another round of questions for polar bear researcher

A polar bear swimming
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From National Public Radio

Polar Bear Scientist Faces New Questions

by Nell Greenfieldboyce

A wildlife biologist is continuing to face questions about an influential paper he wrote on apparently drowned polar bears, with government investigators reportedly asking whether he improperly steered a research contract to another scientist as a reward for reviewing that paper.

“They seem to be suggesting that there is some sort of conspiracy that involves global warming and back scratching that appears to be frankly just nuts,” says Jeff Ruch, a lawyer with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.

Ruch’s group is providing legal representation to Charles Monnett, a wildlife biologist with an agency of the Department of the Interior. Monnett was flying over the Arctic in 2004, doing a routine survey of whales, when his team spotted an unusual sight — dead polar bears floating in the water.

Monnett’s report on what he observed raised public alarm about the threat of climate change and melting ice, and the sighting of dead bears was cited by Al Gore in his movie An Inconvenient Truth. The dead bears became a potent symbol of the perils that the bears face as the sea ice retreats.

But now Monett is under an official investigation by the Department of Interior’s Office of Inspector General.

In February, agents from that office questioned Monnett about the dead bear sightings and his 2006 report on them in a scientific journal. “We’re not sure why the Inspector General felt it needed to open an investigation on this. They indicated there are allegations,” says Ruch. “We don’t know who they’re from or why, after review, they thought this 2006 note was worth assigning criminal investigators to.”

Investigators again quizzed Monnett about that polar bear paper during a second interview on August 9, Ruch says.

As part of his job, Monnett helped manage contracts for government-funded research. Ruch says in this latest interview, the investigators seemed to accuse Monnett of improperly steering a contract for a new study of polar bears to the University of Alberta. They pointed to the fact that a university scientist who got the contract gave Monnett comments on his polar bear paper.

“They asked whether there was a quid pro quo or whether there was some connection between the University of Alberta professor providing some sort of peer review on the polar bear paper and his getting the award of the contract,” says Ruch.

Ruch says the investigators focused on one exchange between the two scientists about the polar bear paper that took place on the same day that the research contract was being finalized. “That was the big A-ha moment for them,” Ruch says. “And if that’s all they have, then this has been a colossal waste of time.”

The research contract had been in negotiations for months and that Monnett’s supervisors had signed off on it, says Ruch, who added that the University of Alberta was the only organization considered for this new polar bear tagging project because the contract piggybacked on research it was already doing.

And while Monnett asked the university scientist to read his soon-to-be-famous paper on dead polar bears, Ruch says others—both agency officials and the scientific journal—reviewed it before it was published.

The University of Alberta research project being funded by the contract in question received a stop-work order around the same time that Monnett was put on administrative leave by his agency last month. But that stop-work order was rescinded and the research is now continuing.

A spokesperson for Monnett’s agency has stated that “the agency placed Mr. Monnett on administrative leave for reasons having nothing to do with scientific integrity, his 2006 journal article, or issues related to permitting, as has been alleged. Any suggestions or speculation to the contrary are wrong.” The Inspector General’s office did not return calls requesting comment.

Some advocacy groups say, this whole episode looks like political interference with science and it will intimidate other government researchers.

“There’s no way this can have anything but a chilling effect on the ability of other scientists to carry out their work,” says Kassie Siegel, director of the Climate Law Institute with the Center for Biological Diversity, a nonprofit that campaigned to have the polar bear listed as a threatened species. Her group has teamed up with Greenpeace to ask the administration for an investigation into this investigation.

But others caution against rushing to any judgments.

“We won’t know, until the [inspector general] is done, exactly what the charges are and exactly what they are finding,” says Francesca Grifo, director of the scientific integrity program at the Union of Concerned Scientists.

She says in the past, the inspector general’s office has actually uncovered political interference with science. “In previous administrations, we’ve been very grateful for what the inspector generals at Interior have found,” says Grifo. “They’ve brought to light a lot of things that we just wouldn’t have known about or been able to document otherwise.”

Some polar bear scientists worry that, for the public, this investigation has created doubt about both the original observations of dead bears and the threat of climate change.

Steve Amstrup, senior scientist with a group called Polar Bears International, says Monnett wasn’t the only person to have seen those dead polar bears in the water. “But yet, the news that he was being investigated caused some people to right away jump to the conclusion that those observations may be flawed,” says Amstrup.

He says there’s no reason to think that, and that other research also shows that climate change and retreating sea ice is a real danger for polar bears.

h/t to reader bollabob

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C Porter
August 10, 2011 10:37 am

There’s not a cat in hells chance that this will lead to any disciplinery action if the likes of Jones and Mann can get away with what they did and with documentary evidence as well.

John Brisbin
August 10, 2011 10:43 am

The paragraph in the article text: “A Polar Bear walks on the edge of Hudson Bay ahead of the full freeze-over Nov. 14, 2007, outside Churchill, Mantioba, Canada. Polar Bears return every year to Churchill, the Polar Bear capital of the world, where they remain hunting for seals on the icepack until the Spring thaw.”
Appears to be a caption from a picture not shown. Perhaps it might be removed?
[Thanks, paragraph removed. ~dbs, mod.]

Rick K
August 10, 2011 10:44 am

If the Arctic were littered with the carcasses of polar bears… wouldn’t the pictures be plastered all over the internet?

Jordan
August 10, 2011 10:56 am

Latitude says: “Has there been any more drowned bears spotted since September 2004”
If you are careful to replicate the exrapolaton, the bear in the above photo has a good chance of being dead.
Relies on principles of physics colloquially known as “Schroedinger’s Bear”.

Schaeffer
August 10, 2011 10:58 am

Polar bears cannot be all dying naturally on land. Dying at sea must be far more common than is discussed. The assumption of polar bears drowning due to lack of sea ice is deeply flawed on many, many levels. Where does one even begin…? Would it not be unreasonable to believe that polar bears do die at sea, reasons completely urelated to climate change…? Oh silly me, probably not.

Mike Jackson
August 10, 2011 10:59 am

Reading between the lines of Ruch’s and Siegel’s remarks, are we to take it that any scientist involved in research with an environmental angle is supposed to be left strictly alone to get on with it regardless?
That’s certainly the way it reads to me.

August 10, 2011 11:01 am

I think Rob Potter is correct. Follow the money. Dr Monnett wasn’t very smart putting his wife in her position. That smacks of nepotism and would look dodgy to any outsider. It’s similar to Sen. Dianne Feinstein awarding her husband’s companies $billions in no-bid contracts when she was Chair of the Senate’s powerful Military Appropriations subcommittee (she was forced to resign in disgrace as subcommittee Chair because of that wrongdoing. But because she’s a Senator, she didn’t go to prison).
I suspect Monnett started treating the $50 million he controlled as his personal assets, instead of as public funds, which he had a fiduciary duty to administer responsibly and ethically. The investigation is probably due to a routine audit or to a whistleblower; maybe both. But the polar bear aspect isn’t why the AG would assign investigators to fly to Alaska, and it wouldn’t explain the length of this investigation, or Monnett’s suspension. Misappropriation of public funds would.

Bruce
August 10, 2011 11:04 am

“Steve Amstrup, senior scientist with a group called Polar Bears International, says Monnett wasn’t the only person to have seen those dead polar bears in the water.”
No cameras? I find that strange.

Grizzled Bear
August 10, 2011 11:12 am

The number of “interested” parties in this is staggering. Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, the Climate Law Institute with the Center for Biological Diversity, Greenpeace, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Polar Bears International… The number of professional mouthpieces speaks volumes for how seriously they’re circling the wagons to protect this single, solitary, soldier for the cause. When the number of loudmouthed spin-meisters reaches this level of ridiculousness, you just KNOW you’re getting too close to the truth. Me thinks they doth protest way too freaking much.
Duke C – You hit the nail straight home with one shot.
jorgekafkazar – It isn’t just their blubber that keeps them afloat. Their guard hairs are hollow and act like the cells of a cork. I doubt it would be unusual for a polar bear to drown if caught in open water during a serious storm. But Monnet’s assumption that they drowned because they had to swim so far between ice floes was pure conjecture from a preconceived agenda.

t stone
August 10, 2011 11:13 am

DesertYote says:
August 10, 2011 at 9:30 am
Time to defund NPR, along with the EPA.
You got that right. This is a prime example of the propaganda supported by our taxes. What’s really amazing is what was left out of this report. Was Monnett studying whales? Polar bears? A little of this? A little of that? And of course this report forgets to mention the storm that blew through the area 24 hrs previous.
De-fund NPR indeed! Don’t spit on me and tell me it’s raining (family friendly version). They can propagate all the crap they want, just don’t do it with my money.

Larry
August 10, 2011 11:14 am

I wonder how many drowned polar bears there were during the medieval warming period? Oh that’s right, mankind didn’t have the internet, and cameras to record it, therefore it must not have happened.

Ulrich Elkmann
August 10, 2011 11:31 am

It would also explain why he sounded so completely at sea (no pun intended) in the protocol that you posted. He might have been prepared on his handling of funds, but not for something that was unrelated to these issues, while the investigators were looking for instances where Monnett demonstrated clear signs of incompetence and/or groundless overconfidence.

Nuke
August 10, 2011 11:47 am

The claim is the researcher is being investigated for reporting seeing some drowned polar bears? And people buy that? How gullible can these people be? Do they ever question anything?

Paddy
August 10, 2011 11:52 am

1. Don E says:
August 10, 2011 at 10:23 am
Where do the seals go when there is no ice?
Beaches and islands.
2. Is is time for a little speculation about research conspiracies. I read among other things that Monnett’s wife is one of the reviewer of his 2006 paper, and that a researcher from U of Alberta is another reviewer. Following publication, Monnett received and manages $80 million in federal research funds to further investigate the impacts from global warming on polar bears. Some of those funds apparently went to the U of Alberta reviewer.
There is enough to suggest that Monnett maybe part of network that promotes pro-global warming research. It is also reasonable to suspect that Monnett’s investigation also inquires into his potential misuse or mis-management of the research grants.
These are truly interesting times.

August 10, 2011 12:01 pm

The good news is that any changes in the polar bear population will not negatively or positively effect penquin populations. But I suspect the alarmist models will show they will.

Gus
August 10, 2011 12:24 pm

“They seem to be suggesting that there is some sort of conspiracy that involves global warming and back scratching that appears to be frankly just nuts,” says Jeff Ruch, a lawyer with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
The sheer audacity!
/sarc

Michael J. Dunn
August 10, 2011 12:37 pm

Polar bear in extremis climbs out of water onto ice floe and drops dead. Ice melts. Dead bear becomes flotsam. I’m just sayin’….

KnR
August 10, 2011 12:58 pm

Just a quick question is there any reliable measurement for the number of Polar bears that have drowned over the years other than model speculation and this one accidental and very limited fly bye ?
‘Some polar bear scientists worry that, for the public, this investigation has created doubt about both the original observations of dead bears and the threat of climate change’ and of course the danger to the fat or even very fat grants this scare has created .
Monnett could of course be totally innocent it could just be cock=up in finical control or a COI issue due to poor management, becasue lets face scientists can still be idiots when it come dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s
But the original research was poor making large assumptions on little evidenced and if it had not ,like the hockey stick, become a icon of the AGW fatih would probable have been quietly forgotten or changed thanks to further research .

DonS
August 10, 2011 1:01 pm

Don E:
To the beach, where the polar bears are waiting to dine.

Coalsoffire
August 10, 2011 1:19 pm

How about this? Some polar bears are rooting around making a nuisance of themselves in an Inuit hunting camp along the edge of shore ice that extends somewhat out into the sea. Someone fixes the problem with a rifle. The campers depart on their snow mobiles or whatever and a chunk of the ice along the shore breaks off and floats out to sea taking the dead bears with it. Later on the ice floe melts and Voila dead (drowned!!!) bears in the water. I’m just sayin’….

DCC
August 10, 2011 1:31 pm

The original paper was junk science on the face of it. Unless he has done an autopsy and determined the cause of death, he’s jumping to conclusions. And if they drowned, he still needs to show that it wasn’t caused by a polar bear fight in the water or some other damage to the bear.
As for Jeff Ruch, a lawyer with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility – do you suppose he has a dog in this fight?

August 10, 2011 1:38 pm

“A Polar Bear walks on the edge of Hudson Bay ahead of the full freeze-over Nov. 14, 2007, outside Churchill, Mantioba, Canada. Polar Bears return every year to Churchill, the Polar Bear capital of the world, where they remain hunting for seals on the icepack until the Spring thaw.”
Here in the “polar bear capital of the world” the ice doesn’t just recede, it disappears for thousands of kilometers for about 5 months!! The bears seem to like this and a large population has developed here. What qualifications do I need to write a paper that says less ice means more polar bears
Oh, and another thing – if it is true that the Alberta contract was subject to stoppage at the time of the beginning of the investigation then its hard to not see the polar bear connection.
Such investigation could necessarily become the new “peer review” procedure if these guys don’t get their acts together. You almost have to commit treason for the government to suspend you. While on leave, Monnet should have been sent for remedial statistics as well. Shocking.

August 10, 2011 2:16 pm

Steve from Rockwood says:
August 10, 2011 at 9:15 am
“If you asked a polar bear what the major problems facing it were, it would likely point to hunting by humans as the number one problem. How can you claim polar bears are facing extinction and not place hunting above global warming?”
Apart from hunting I understood the number one problem to be the build of heavy metals, particularly mercury, in polar bears. It is interesting that the EPA has not banned mercury or the fish that have high levels of mercury but instead set a ‘safe’ limit.

old44
August 10, 2011 2:44 pm

“Jeff Ruch, a lawyer with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility”
Could I take a wild stab at guessing which side of the fence he is on?

Steven Kopits
August 10, 2011 3:40 pm

According to polarbearsinternational.org, “legal hunting continues to kill more than 700 polar bears a year” throughout the Arctic.