Baker

John A. Baker
Research Fellow

The George Perkins Marsh Institute
Clark University
Worcester, MA 01610-1477
508.793.7661 phone
email: jbaker@clarku.edu

Current Research Interests

  • Life history
  • Evolution
  • Stream ecology
  • Conservation
Baker's interest in ecology and environmental sciences began during his work on a MSc degree in 1975, which centered on the ecology of stream fishes. Following completion of his master's degree, he worked as a biological technician for NOAA, then moved to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Waterways Experiment Station in Vicksburg, MS to work on assessing, and mitigating the effect of Corps of Engineers activities in inland and coastal waters. During a 16-year stay with the Corps, Baker authored or co-authored more than 20 peer-reviewed technical and other reports on studies of large river systems, natural lakes, reservoirs, wetlands, and coastal environments. In 1995 moved to Clark University, where he is presently a research assistant professor in the Department of Biology, and also teaches Applied Ecology in the IDCE Program. He completed his Ph.D. degree in 1998, from the University of Arkansas, while at Clark. Baker has been affiliated with the Marsh Institute since 1996. In addition to his environmental studies, Baker has maintained an active research program in other areas, studying the connections between environment and life history in a variety of southeastern U.S. stream fishes, and in the threespine stickleback. He maintains close collaborations with colleagues in the U.S., Canada, and Europe, and he has authored or co-authored nearly 50 peer-reviewed papers or book chapters on topics including river restoration, wetlands, fish ecology, fish life history, and conservation. Baker has received two NSF grants (with S.A. Foster), one of which is current.

Selected Publications

Foster, S.A., J.A. Baker and M.A. Bell. 2003. The case for conserving stickleback populations: Protecting an adaptive radiation. Fisheries 28: 10-18.

Brookes, A., J.A. Baker and C.R. Redmond. 1996. Floodplain restoration and riparian zone management. In River channel restoration: Guiding principles for sustainable projects, eds. A. Brookes and F.D. Shields, 201-229. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons.

Baker, J.A., R.L. Kasul, L.E. Winfield, C.R. Bingham, C.H. Pennington, and R.E. Coleman. 1987. An ecological investigation of revetted and natural bank habitats in the lower Mississippi River. Vicksburg, MS: Lower Mississippi River Environmental Program, Report 9, Mississippi River Commission.

 


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