The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on Friday told staff members it has canceled subscriptions carried by its National Agricultural Library as part of a drive by President Donald Trump’s administration to cut federal spending. The move appears to drop nearly 400 of the library’s roughly 2000 journals, including many prominent in various agricultural subfieldsbut curiously none from the world’s three largest scientific publishers, all of which are for-profit. USDA staff members depicted the move as hasty, indiscriminate slashing.

The library provides full texts of paywalled journal articles to USDA’s staff scientists – at the start of the year, ARS alone employed about 2000 scientists and postdoctoral researchers – and loans papers to scientists across the country whose host institutions lack a subscription to a particular journal. The agricultural library is one of five U.S. national libraries. 

Most of the affected publishers are university or nonprofit scientific society presses, including Cambridge University Press; Oxford University Press; the American Phytopathological Society; the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, which publishes the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; and AAAS, which publishes Science. Several of the journals whose subscriptions were canceled rank in the top quartile for impact factor in their subfield.

More: https://www.science.org/content/article/doge-order-leads-journal-cancellations-u-s-agricultural-library