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The Island of Doubt

An irregular exploration of the struggle between the power of rational discourse and the scientific method on one hand, and the forces of superstition and dogma on the other.

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me-fergus.jpg James Hrynyshyn is a freelance science journalist based in western North Carolina, where he tries to put degrees in marine biology and journalism to good use.

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for 9 July 2007

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Add to Technorati Favorites! Penetrating so many secrets, we cease to believe in the unknowable. But there it sits nevertheless, calmly licking its chops.
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Ransom Myers: A legend in marine biology finally silenced

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Posted on: March 31, 2007 5:46 PM, by James Hrynyshyn

Ransom Myers had a habit of telling people what they didn't want to hear. In the 1990s, his employers in the Canadian government didn't like it when he told them overfishing was to blame for the collapse of the northern cod stocks. Three years ago it was the U.S. federal government, in a classic example of its anti-science bias, that removed his recommendations on the importance of habitat protection from a report on west coast salmon stocks. But he kept telling it like it is. Until a brain tumor finally got the best of him on March 27.

At 54, Myers should have had many more years of blowing the whistle on human mismanagement of marine ecosystems. His last paper, which appeared this weekend in Science, "Cascading Effects of the Loss of Apex Predatory Sharks from a Coastal Ocean" was a typical expose on how we still have no idea what we're doing to the world's oceans the wildlife that lives in them.

I never had a chance to meet "Ram," as he was called by those who knew him best. And now I never will. He was one of the great marine biologists of our time. Do yourself a favor and read or listen to an obituary.

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Comments

Thanks for this.

Not to diminish its seriousness, I have to admit that, on reading the first two words of the caption, the first thought that came to me is "They've kidnapped PZ." Then I thought, "Oh, it's an early April Fools joke." Context is sometimes quite important. ;-)

Posted by: chezjake | March 31, 2007 8:00 PM

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