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Department of Forest Engineering
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John Duff Bailey

Associate Professor

BS, 1983 Virginia Tech
MS, 1985 Virginia Tech
PhD, 1996 Oregon State University

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Research Interests & Activity

Silviculture, Fuels and Fire Management, and Adaptive Ecosystem Management

Silviculture Is The Tool for Achieving Many Management Objectives

My research focuses on using traditional and experimental silviculture practices to achieve a spectrum of objectives in a landscape, including commodity production, habitat creation, and ecosystem restoration. The art and science of forest management has not fundamentally changed in the last decade, but the objectives have broadened and become more controversial. This forces our forest management actions to be more creative, complex, adaptive and defensible.

We have initiated research projects to evaluate the role of stand structure and dynamics on fire hazard, mature forest development, sustainable forest management, and post-fire recovery. Our silviculture research considers the broad economic, ecological, and sociopolitical implications on forest management.

Graduate Students: Emily Comfort (PhD); Christopher Dunn (PhD);Heidi Roe (MS); Chaylon Shuffield (MS)

Courses:

  • FOR 429 - Integrated Prescriptions

  • FOR 436 - Wildland Fire Science and Fuels Management

  • FOR 443/543 - Siilvicultural Practices

  • FOR 446 - Wildland Fire Ecology

Selected publications:

  • Ares., A., T. Terry, C.A. Harrington, W. Devine, D. Peter and J.D. Bailey. 2007. Biomass removal, soil compaction, and vegetation control effects on five-year growth of Douglas-fir in coastal Washington. For. Sci. 53(5):600-610

  • McDowell, N.G., H.D. Adams, J.D. Bailey, and T.E. Kolb. 2007. The role of stand density on growth efficiency, leaf area index and resin flow in southwestern ponderosa pine forests. Can. J. For. Res. 37:343-355.

  • Faiella, S.M. and J.D. Bailey. 2007. Fluctuations in fuel moisture across restoration treatments in semi-arid ponderosa pine forests of northern Arizona, USA. Intl J. Wildl. Fire 16:119127.

  • Landis, A.G. and J.D. Bailey. 2006. Predicting the age of pinyon and juniper trees in northern Arizona: guides for forest restoration treatments. West. J. App. For. 21(4):203-6.

  • Bailey, J.D. and C.A. Harrington. 2006. Temperature regulation of bud-burst phenology within and among years in a young Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) plantation in western Washington, USA. Tree Physiol. 26:421-430.

  • Bailey, J.D. and N.A. Harjanto. 2005. Teak (Tectona grandis L.) tree growth, stem quality and health in coppiced plantations in Java, Indonesia. New Forests 30:55-65.

  • Kerns, B.K., S.J. Alexander and J.D. Bailey. 2005. Huckleberry abundance, stand conditions and use in western Oregon: Evaluating the role of forest management. Economic Botany 58(4):668-678.

  • Landis, A. G. and J. D. Bailey. 2005. Reconstruction of age structure and spatial arrangement of pinyon-juniper woodlands and savannas of Anderson Mesa, northern Arizona. For. Ecol. Mgt. 204:221-236.

  • Linn, R., J. Winterkamp, J. J. Colman, C. Edminster and J. D. Bailey. 2005. Modeling interactions between fire and atmosphere in discrete element fuel beds. Intl. J. Wildland Fire 14:37-48.

  • G.L. Zausen, T.E. Kolb, J.D. Bailey, and M.R. Wagner. 2005. Long-term impacts of stand management on ponderosa pine physiology and bark beetle abundance in northern Arizona: A replicated landscape study. For. Ecol. Mgt. 218:291-305.

  • Sesnie, S. and J. D. Bailey. 2003. Using history to plan the future of old-growth ponderosa pine. J. of Forestry 101/7: 40-47.

  • Bailey, J. D. and W. W. Covington. 2002. Evaluating ponderosa pine regeneration rates following ecological restoration treatments in northern Arizona, U.S.A. For. Ecol. Mgt. 155/1-3: 271-278.

  • Bailey, J. D. and L. H. Liegel. 1998. Pacific Yew (Taxus brevifolia Nutt.) growth and site factors in western Oregon. Northwest Science 72(4): 283-292.

  • Bailey, J. D., C. Mayrsohn, P. S. Doescher, E. St. Pierre and J. C. Tappeiner. 1998. Understory vegetation in old and young forests of western Oregon. For. Ecol. Mgt. 112/3: 289-302.

  • Bailey, J. D. and J. C. Tappeiner. 1998. Effects of thinning on structural development in 40- to 100-year-old Douglas-fir stands in western Oregon. For. Ecol. and Mgt. 108:99-113.

  • Bailey, J. D. and L. H. Leigel. 1997. Pacific Yew (Taxus brevifolia) Response to Partial Removal of an Overstory Canopy. Western Journal of Applied Forestry. 12(2):41-43.

  • Hayes, J.P., S. Chan, W. H. Emmingham, J. C. Tappeiner, L. D. Kellogg, and J. D. Bailey. 1997. Wildlife response to thinning young forests in the Pacific Northwest. Journal of Forestry. 95(8): 28-33.

  • Tappeiner, J. C., D. Huffman, D. Marshall, T. A. Spies, and J. D. Bailey. 1997. Density, ages and diameter growth rates in old-growth and young-growth forests in coastal Oregon. Canadian Journal of Forest Research. 27: 638-648.

 

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