nicholas t. basta of soil and environmental chemistry the ... faculty cvs.pdf · james a. whatley...

75
School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae 1 Nicholas T. Basta Professor of Soil and Environmental Chemistry School of Environment and Natural Resources The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH Education Ph.D. 1989 Iowa State University, Soil Chemistry; Minor in Analytical Chemistry M.S. 1984 Iowa State University, Soil Science B.S. 1981 Pennsylvania State University, Chemistry Professional Experience 7/03-present Professor of Soil and Environmental Chemistry, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH. 7/91-6/03 Professor of Soil Chemistry, Dept. of Plant and Soil Sciences, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK Program Brief Dr. Nick Basta has a very active research program focused on risk-based environmental chemistry and bioavailability of contaminants and nutrients in soil with emphasis on human (e.g., public health), agronomic (e.g., crop, animal), and ecosystem pathways. His soil environmental chemistry program uses novel methodology to study the beneficial use of agricultural, industrial, and municipal by-products through land application and the fate of by-products in agronomic/ environmental systems with emphasis on their risk and environmental impact. Dr. Basta has more than 300 career publications including 85 peer-reviewed manuscripts published in scientific journals. He has been PI or co-PI on $18.6 million in grants and contracts. He has delivered 130+ invited presentations including 41 at international scientific meetings. He has served on several Editorial Boards including 12 years as Technical or Associate Editor for the Journal of Environmental Quality. Dr. Basta has conducted many research projects sponsored by competitive extramural funding programs including the National Science Foundation, U.S. EPA, American Water Works Association, Strategic Environment Research and Development Program, USDA, and other federal, state, and private interests. Dr. Basta is an active member of several international and national scientific committees focused on bioavailability and environmental fate of soil contaminants including the Bioavailability Research Group of Europe (BARGE), the Bioavailability Research Group of Canada (BARC), the International Society for Trace Element Biogeochemistry, and the CSREES Technical Committee, Project W-1170, "Chemistry, Bioavailability, and Toxicity of Constituents in Residuals and Residual-Treated Soils. He is a Fellow of the Soil Science Society of America (SSSA) and the American Society of America and is past chair of the Soil Chemistry division of SSSA. Dr. Basta has a very active research program focused on risk-based environmental chemistry and bioavailability of contaminants and nutrients in soil with emphasis on human, agronomic, and ecosystem pathways. Select Awards and Honors Excellence in Review Award. 2010. Environmental Science and Technology Journal, American Chemical Society. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Friend of Office of Solid Waste Award, 2008. In recognition of the “pathbreaking work on the Foundry Sand Risk Assessment” conducted by Drs. N. Basta and E. Dayton of OSU and Drs. R. Chaney and R. Dungan of USDA ARS.

Upload: others

Post on 30-Jun-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

1

Nicholas T. Basta Professor of Soil and Environmental Chemistry School of Environment and Natural Resources The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH Education Ph.D. 1989 Iowa State University, Soil Chemistry; Minor in Analytical Chemistry M.S. 1984 Iowa State University, Soil Science B.S. 1981 Pennsylvania State University, Chemistry Professional Experience 7/03-present Professor of Soil and Environmental Chemistry, School of Environment and Natural

Resources, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH. 7/91-6/03 Professor of Soil Chemistry, Dept. of Plant and Soil Sciences, Oklahoma State

University, Stillwater, OK Program Brief Dr. Nick Basta has a very active research program focused on risk-based environmental chemistry and bioavailability of contaminants and nutrients in soil with emphasis on human (e.g., public health), agronomic (e.g., crop, animal), and ecosystem pathways. His soil environmental chemistry program uses novel methodology to study the beneficial use of agricultural, industrial, and municipal by-products through land application and the fate of by-products in agronomic/ environmental systems with emphasis on their risk and environmental impact. Dr. Basta has more than 300 career publications including 85 peer-reviewed manuscripts published in scientific journals. He has been PI or co-PI on $18.6 million in grants and contracts. He has delivered 130+ invited presentations including 41 at international scientific meetings. He has served on several Editorial Boards including 12 years as Technical or Associate Editor for the Journal of Environmental Quality. Dr. Basta has conducted many research projects sponsored by competitive extramural funding programs including the National Science Foundation, U.S. EPA, American Water Works Association, Strategic Environment Research and Development Program, USDA, and other federal, state, and private interests. Dr. Basta is an active member of several international and national scientific committees focused on bioavailability and environmental fate of soil contaminants including the Bioavailability Research Group of Europe (BARGE), the Bioavailability Research Group of Canada (BARC), the International Society for Trace Element Biogeochemistry, and the CSREES Technical Committee, Project W-1170, "Chemistry, Bioavailability, and Toxicity of Constituents in Residuals and Residual-Treated Soils. He is a Fellow of the Soil Science Society of America (SSSA) and the American Society of America and is past chair of the Soil Chemistry division of SSSA. Dr. Basta has a very active research program focused on risk-based environmental chemistry and bioavailability of contaminants and nutrients in soil with emphasis on human, agronomic, and ecosystem pathways.

Select Awards and Honors Excellence in Review Award. 2010. Environmental Science and Technology Journal, American

Chemical Society. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Friend of Office of Solid Waste Award, 2008. In

recognition of the “pathbreaking work on the Foundry Sand Risk Assessment” conducted by Drs. N. Basta and E. Dayton of OSU and Drs. R. Chaney and R. Dungan of USDA ARS.

Page 2: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

2

College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences, Pomerene Departmental Teaching Excellence Award, The Ohio State University, 2006.

Faculty Recognition Award, Sphinx and Mortar Board Society, The Ohio State University, 2006. Fellow, Soil Science Society of America, 2004; Fellow, American Society of Agronomy, 2003. James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ.,

1998. Outstanding Teaching Award, Dept. of Agronomy, Oklahoma State Univ., 1996. Research Excellence Award, Iowa State University, 1989 (dissertation research designated as

among top 10% at Iowa State). Summary of activities by the numbers Grants and Contracts: 25 Extramural; 35 total; $18.6 M Publications: Total of 329; 85 refereed journals, 9 book chapters; average citations per manuscript:

20.5; h-index 22 Teaching at Ohio State: Course / average enrollment / student evaluation (max = 5.0) ENR 660 / 21 / 4.7; ENR 675 / 38 / 4.7; ENR 740 / 11 / 4.7 Presentations at scientific meetings: Total 220; 134 invited presentations; 41 international, 31

national meetings with 3 plenary and 3 keynote presentations; organized 17 symposia Service Editorial boards: J. Soil and Sediment Contamination; 2003-present; J. Environmental Quality Technical Editor, 2002-2007; Associate Editor, 1997-2002; Critical Reviews in Environmental

Science and Technology (2004-2006). International / national / regional committees: Total of 17 including Bioavailability Research Group

of Europe, 2004-present; Bioavailability Research Group of Canada, 2007-present; USDA CSREES Technical Committee, Project W1170 - Chemistry, Bioavailability, and Toxicity of Constituents in Residuals and Residual-Treated Soils, 1994-present; Co-Chair, 1999-2004. W-1170’s membership includes more than 30 scientists representing academic institutions from 25+ states, federal agencies, and industry.

Committee service at Ohio State: Total of 20 committees Graduate student degree programs chaired: Total of 35 including 13 Ph.D., 18 M.S., 4 MENR Graduate student degree programs (not as chair) at Ohio State: Total 38, 19 Ph.D., 19 M.S. Undergraduate advising in ENR at Ohio State: Total of 46 students (2 honor students) External Examiner for Ph.D. graduate student programs: 2 (Univ. of Saskatchewan; Royal Military

College of Canada) External Reviewer/Referee for Extramural University Promotion and Tenure Committees: Total of 8

including 2 international (Univ. of Saskatchewan; Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Universität für Bodenkultur, Vienna, Austria.

Visiting Scientists: Professor Tom Van deWiele, University of Ghent, Belgium, 2007. Community service: 32 presentations; assist high school teachers and students in science based

submissions to the Ohio Academy of Science. Other professional service: Administer examinations for Soil Science Certification from Soil Science

Society of America for Ohio.

Page 3: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

3

Jeremy Tyler Bruskotter Education University of Minnesota Natural Resources Science & Management Ph.D. 2007 Utah State University Human Dimensions of Ecosystem Science M.S. 2004 Western Michigan Univ. Art B.A. 1995 Professional History Assistant Professor, Human Dimensions of Wildlife, School of Environment and Natural Resources,

The Ohio State University, 2007 – present. Research Associate, The Wilds, Cumberland, Ohio, 2009 – present. Research Assistant, Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, University of

Minnesota, 2004 – 2007. Lecturer, Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota,

2006 – 2007. Research Assistant, Utah State University, 2002 – 2003. Refereed Publications 1. Bruskotter, J. T. and D. C. Fulton. In Press. Will hunters’ steward wolves? A Reply to Treves

and Martin. Society and Natural Resources. 2. Bruskotter, J. T., S.A. Enzler, and A. Treves. In Press. Rescuing Wolves from Politics:

Wildlife as a Public Trust Resource. Science 333:1828-1829. 3. Way, J., and Bruskotter, J.T. In Press. Additional Considerations for Gray Wolf Management

after their Removal from Endangered Species Act Protections. Journal of Wildlife Management. 4. Treves, A., and J. T. Bruskotter. 2011. Gray Wolf Conservation at a Crossroads. BioScience

61 (8):584-585. 5. Hauser, B. K., Koontz T. M., and J. T. Bruskotter. In Press. Volunteer Participation in

Collaborative Watershed Partnerships: Insights from the Theory of Planned Behavior. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management.

6. Wilson, R.S., Hitzhusen, G.E., Bruskotter, J.T. and A. Zwickle. In Press. Understanding student environmental interests when designing multidisciplinary curriculum. In Higher education for sustainability: Cases, challenges and opportunities across the curriculum. Edited by L.F. Johnston. Winston-Salem, NC, USA: Wake Forest University.

7. Bruskotter, J. T., and L. B. Shelby. 2010. Human dimensions of large carnivore conservation and management: Introduction to the special issue. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 15 (5):311-314.

8. Bruskotter, J. T., E. Toman, S. A. Enzler, and R. H. Schmidt. 2010. Are Gray Wolves Endangered in the Northern Rocky Mountains? A Role for Social Science in Endangered Species Listing Determinations. BioScience 60 (11):941-948.

9. Bruskotter, J. T., E. Toman, S.A. Enzler, and R. H. Schmidt. 2010. Gray Wolves Not Out of the Woods Yet. Science 327:30-31. (Letter)

10. Bruskotter, J. T., J. J. Vaske, and R. H. Schmidt. 2009. Social and Cognitive Correlates of Utah Residents' Acceptance of the Lethal Control of Wolves. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 14 (2):119-132.

Page 4: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

4

11. Bruskotter, J. T., and S.A. Enzler. 2009. Narrowing the Definition of Endangered Species: Implications of the U.S. Government's Interpretation of the Phrase "A Significant Portion of its Range" Under the Endangered Species Act of 1973. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 14 (2):73 - 88.

12. Wilson, R. S., and J. T. Bruskotter. 2009. Assessing the Impact of Decision Frame and Existing Attitudes on Support for Wolf Restoration in the United States. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 14 (5):353-365.

13. Enzler, S. A., and J. T. Bruskotter. 2009. Contested Definitions of Endangered Species: The Controversy Regarding How to Interpret the Phrase "A Significant Portion a Species' Range". Virginia Environmental Law Journal 27 (1):1-65.

14. Bruskotter, J. T., and D. C. Fulton. 2008. Minnesota Anglers’ Fisheries-Related Value Orientations and their Stewardship of Fish Resources Human Dimensions of Wildlife 13 (4):207-221.

15. Bruskotter, J. T., R. H. Schmidt, and T. L. Teel. 2007. Are attitudes toward wolves changing? A case study in Utah. Biological Conservation 139 (1-2):211-218.

16. Bruskotter, J. T., and D. C. Fulton. 2007. The Influence of Anglers Value Orientations on Fisheries Stewardship Norms. In Aquatic Stewardship Education in Theory and Practice, edited by B. A. Knuth and W. F. Siemer. Bethesda, MA: American Fisheries Society.

Page 5: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

5

Konrad Dabrowski Professor Telephone: (614) 292-4555 School of Environment and Natural Resources Fax: (614) 292-7432 The Ohio State University E-mail: [email protected] 2021 Coffey Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43210 Educations M.Sc. Inland Fisheries; Agriculture University, Olsztyn, Poland, 1972 Ph.D. Fisheries; Agriculture University, Olsztyn, Poland, 1976 D.Sc. Fish Physiology, Agricultural University, Szczecin, Poland, 1984 Positions Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, Columbus,

Ohio (1989-present) Visiting Professor, University of Ghent, Belgium (2009) Visiting Professor, Institute of Zoology, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria (1987-1989) Visiting Professor, Department of Biology, University of Paris VII, Orsey, France (1985) Visiting Professor Department of Aquaculture, University of Fisheries, Tokyo (1984-1985) Assistant/Associate Professor, Inland Fisheries and Water Protection, Agriculture University,

Olsztyn, Poland (1972-1987) Scientific and Professional Organizations American Fisheries Society World Aquaculture Society Selected Publications Jaroszewska M. and Dabrowski, K., 2011. Utilization of yolk: transition from endogenous to

exogenous nutrition in fish. In: Larval Fish Nutrition, First Edition, G. Joan Holt (Ed.), John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 183-218.

Dabrowski, K., and Hardy, R. 2010. Basic and Applied Aspects of Aquaculture Nutrition”, (Eds.), Aquaculture Research 41, Number 5, Wiley-Blackwell.

Jaroszewska M., Dabrowski, K., 2009: Early ontogeny of Semionotiformes and Amiiformes (Neopterygii: Actinopterygii). In: Development of Non-Teleost Fish, Y.W. Kunz, C.A. Luer and B.G. Kapoor (Eds.), Science Publishers Inc. pp. 231-275.

Ostaszewska, T. and Dabrowski, K., 2009. Early Development of Acipenseriformes (Chondrostei, Actinopterygii). In: Development of Non-Teleost Fish, Y.W. Kunz, C.A. Luer, B.G. Kapoor [Eds.], Science Publishers Inc. pp. 171-230.

Verri, T., Terova, G., Dabrowski, K., Saroglia, M. 2011. Peptide transport and animal growth: the fish paradigm. Biology Letters (published on line March 10, 2011).

Rinchard, J., Ware, K., Dabrowski, K., van Tassell, J., Marschall, E., Stein R.A. 2011. Egg thiamine concentration affects embryo survival in Lake Erie walleye. Environental. Biology of Fishes 90: 53-60.

Ostaszewska, T., Dabrowski, K., Kamaszewski, M., Grochowski, P., Verri, T., Rzepkowska, M., Wolnicki, J. 2010. The effect of plant protein-based diet supplemented with dipeptide or free amino acids on digestive tract morphology and PepT1 and PepT2 expressions in common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.). Comparative Biochem. Physiol. A, 157: 158-169.

Page 6: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

6

Jaroszewska, M., Dabrowski, K. Rodriguez, G. 2010. Development of testis and digestive tract in

longose gar (Lepisosteus osseus) at the onset of exogenous feeding of larvae and in juveniles. Aquaculture Res. 41: 1486-1497.

Jaroszewska, M., Lee, B.J., Dabrowski, K., Czesny, S., Rinchard, J., Trzeciak, P., Wilczyńska, B. 2009. Effects of vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency in lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) alevins at hatching stage. Comparative Physiology and Biochemistry 154A: 255-262.

Dabrowski, K., Ware, K., Jaroszewska, M., Kwasek, K., 2009: Evaluation of walleye embryo survival and larval viability following iodine treatment. North Am. Journal of Aquaculture 71:122-129.

Czesny, S., Dettmers, J.M., Rinchard, J., Dabrowski, K. 2009. Linking egg thiamine and fatty acid concentrations of Lake Michigan lake trout with early life stage mortality. Journal of Aquatic Animal Health, 21:262-271.

Jaroszewska, M., Dabrowski, K. 2009: The nature of exocytosis in the yolk trophoblastic layer of of silver arowana (Osteoglossum bicirrhosum) juvenile, the representative of ancient teleost fishes. Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology, 292:1745-1755.

Rodriguez de Oca, G.A.R.M., Dabrowski, K., Park, K., Lee, K.J., Abiado, M.A., 2009. Interaction of phytochemical-quercetin with the other antioxidant, ascorbic acid and their protective effect in tilapia after ultraviolet irradiation. Journal of the World Aquaculture Society, 40:586-600.

Dabrowski, K., M. Arslan, J. Rinchard, M.E. Palacios. 2008. Growth, maturation, induced spawning, and production of the first generation of South American catfish (Pseudoplatystoma sp.) in the North America. J. World Aquacult. Soc. 39: 174-183.

Tratner , S., Pickova, J., Park, K.H., Rinchard, J. Dabrowski, K. 2007. Effects of alfa-lipoic and ascorbic acid on the muscle and brain fatty acids and antioxidant profile of the South American pacu Piaractus mesopotamicus. Aquaculture 273: 158-164.

Terjesen, F.B., Lee, K.J., Zhang, Y., Faila, M. and Dabrowski, K. 2006. Optimization of dipeptide-protein mixtures in experimental diet formulations for rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) alevins. Aquaculture 254: 217-225.

Dabrowski, K., Terjesen, F.B., Zhang, Y., Phang, J.M. and Lee, K.J. 2005. A concept of dietary dipeptides: a step to resolve the problem of amino acid availability in early life of vertebrates. Journal of Experimental Biology 208: 2885-2894.

Page 7: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

7

Craig B. Davis Professor, Environment and Natural Resources Professor, Environmental Science The Ohio State University 2839 Canterbury Lane 210 Kottman Hall Upper Arlington, OH 43221-3076 2021 Coffey Road Ph: (614) 488-9272 Columbus, OH 43210-1085 Cell phone: (614) 582-0297 Ph: (614) 292-3789 Fax: (614) 292-7432 e-mail: [email protected] Education Ph.D. 1972 University of California - Davis, Davis, California: Plant Ecology M.S. 1967 Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, Colorado, Taxonomy B.S. 1964 Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, Colorado, Zoology Academic Employment 1984-Present The Ohio State University, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Columbus,

Ohio Director, Master of Environment & Natural Resources Program, 2010 - Associate Director, Center for Mapping, 1988-90 Coordinator, Dispute Resolution Program, 1987-90 Coordinator, Tropical Renewable Resources Program, 1984-1988 Associate Dean of Agriculture, 1984-88 Director, School of Natural Resources, 1984-88 Professor, 1984-Present

1973-1984 Iowa State University, Environmental Studies Program and Department of Botany, Ames, Iowa

Coordinator of Environmental Studies, 1973-84 Professor, 1982-84 Associate Professor, 1977-82 Assistant Professor, 1973-77

1970-73 Alma College, Department of Biology, Alma, Michigan Instructor &b Asst. Professor, 1970-1973

Publications Welch, Bradley A., Craig B. Davis, and Robert J. Gates. 2006. Dominant environmental gradients in

wetland plant communities invaded by Phragmites australis, Lake Erie, Ohio, USA. Wetlands Ecology and Management 14(6): 511-525.

Lopez, Ricardo D., Craig B. Davis, and m. Siobhan Fennessy. 2002. Ecological relationships between landscape change and plant guilds in depressional wetlands. Landscape Ecology 17: 43-56.

Perera, A., J.R. Burleigh, and C.B. Davis. 1999. Movement and retention of propanil N-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)propanamide in a paddy-riverine wetland system in Sri Lanka. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 72: 255-263.

Page 8: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

8

van der Valk, A.G., B.A. Middleton, R.L. Williams, D.H. Mason, and C.B. Davis. 1993. The biomass of an Indian monsoonal wetland before and after being overgrown with Paspalum disticum L. Vegetatio. 109: 81-90.

van der Valk, A.G., R.L. Pederson, and C.B. Davis. 1992. Restoration and creation of freshwater wetlands using seed banks. Wetlands Ecology and Management 1(4): 191-197.

Middleton, B.A., A.G. van der Valk, R.L. Williams, D.H. Mason, and C.B. Davis. 1991. Vegetation dynamics and seed banks of a monsoonal wetland overgrown with Paspalum disticum. L. in northern India. Aquatic Botany. 40(3):239-259.

Davis, C.B., A.G. van der Valk, and J.L. Baker. 1983. The role of four macrophyte species in the removal of nitrogen and phosphorus from nutrient-rich water in a prairie marsh, Iowa. Madroño. 30(3):133-142.

Davis, C.B. and A.G. van der Valk. 1983. Uptake and release of nutrients by living and decomposing Typha glauca tissues at Eagle Lake, Iowa. Aquatic Botany. 16:75-89.

van der Valk, A.G., C.B. Davis, J.L. Baker, and C.E. Beer. 1980. Natural freshwater wetlands as nitrogen and phosphorus traps for land runoff. Pp. 457-467. In: Greeson, P.E., J.R. Clark, and J.E. Clark (Eds.). Wetland Functions and Values. American Water Resources Association. Minneapolis. 674 pp.

van der Valk, A.G. and C.B. Davis. 1979. A reconstruction of the recent vegetational history of a prairie marsh, Eagle Lake, Iowa, from its seed bank. Aquatic Botany. 6:29-51.

Davis, C.B. and A.G. van der Valk. 1978. The decomposition of standing and fallen litter of Typha glauca and Scirpus fluviatilis. Can. J. Bot. 56:662-675.

van der Valk, A.G. and C.B. Davis. 1978. The role of the seed bank in the vegetation dynamics of prairie glacial marshes. Ecology. 59(2):322-335.

Page 9: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

9

Richard P. Dick Ohio Eminent Scholar and Professor of Soil Microbial Ecology Ohio State University Educations Degree Institution Curriculum Date Ph.D Iowa State University Soil Science (Advisor Prof: M.A. Tabatabai) 1985 M.S. Louisiana State University Soil microbiology (Advisor Prof: E.P. Dunigan) 1977 B.S. University of Minnesota Plant Science 1974 Professional Positions Rank and Title Institution Dates Professor Ohio State University 2004 Professor Oregon State University 1996 to 2004 Project Administrator (0.5 FTE): OSU Senegal USAID (~$10 million) 1997-1999 Associate Professor Oregon State University 1991 to 1996 Assistant Professor Oregon State University 1986 to 1991 Awards and Honors Gamma Sigma Delta, Honor Society of Agriculture, 1983 Research Excellence Award, President’s Office, Iowa State University, 1985 Search for Excellence: Outstanding Leadership in Educational Programming, Oregon State

University Savery Outstanding Young Faculty Award, , College of Ag. Sciences, 1991 Wageningen Agricultural University Visiting Scholar Award, Wageningen, The Netherlands,

1992-93 Research Fellowship, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris, France,

1992-93. Oldfield and Jackman Team Award, Oregon State University, 1995 German Academic Exchange Award, 2000, German Ministry of Science & Technology; Univ.

Hohenheim Fulbright Scholar, 2000, Research Award, Soil Degradation in Sub-Saharan West Africa. US State

Dept. 2001 Fellow, American Society of Agronomy; 2002 Fellow, Soil Science Society of America Grants and Contracts as the PI $10+ million dollars funded since 1986 with major grants from USEPA, USDA, USDOE and NSF Supervision of Personnel and Collaborations M.S. and Ph.D. Graduate Students with Completed Degrees – 32 (2 student awards NASA and

NSF) Recent Referred Journal Articles (gssupervised grad student; pdpostdoc; vsvisiting scientist) 65 gsSchutter, M.E., and R.P. Dick. 2000. Extraction methods of fatty acids for microbial

community structure analysis. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 64:1659-1668. 66 gsSchutter, M.E., and R.P. Dick. 2001 Shifts in substrate utilization potential and microbial

community structure in response to carbon substrates. Soil Biol. Biochem. 33:1481-1491.

Page 10: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

10

67 gsHinojosa M.B, J.A. Carreira, R. García-Ruíz, and R.P. Dick. 2004. Soil moisture pre-treatment effects on enzyme activities as indicators of heavy metal-contaminated and reclaimed soils. Soil Biol. Biochem. 36-1559-1568.

68 gsKnight, T., and R.P. Dick. 2004. Differentiating microbial and stabilized ß-glucosidase activity in soils. Soil Biol. Bioch. 36:2089-2096.

69 gsHinojosa M. Belen, José A. Carreira, Roberto García-Ruíz, Richard P. Dick. 2005. Microbial response to heavy metal polluted soils: Community analysis from PLFA and EL-FA extracts. J Env. Qual. 34:1789-1800.

70 gsCespedes Leon,, C.M., A. Stone, and R. P. Dick. 2006. Organic soil amendments: impacts on snap bean common root rot and soil quality. Appl. Soil Ecol 31:199-210.

71 Medeiros, P.M., M.F. gsFernandes, R.P. Dick, and B.R.T. Simoneit, B.R.T 2006. Seasonal variations in sugar contents and microbial community in a ryegrass soil. Chemosphere 65:832-839.

72 Darby,, H.M., A.G. Stone, and R.P. Dick 2006. Compost and Manure Mediated Impacts on Soilborne Pathogens and Soil Quality. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 70:347–358.

73 gsOchiai, N., M. L. Powelson, R. P. Dick, and F. J. Crowe 2007. Effects of Green Manure Type and Amendment Rate on Verticillium Wilt Severity and Yield of Russet Burbank Potato. Plant Disease 91:400-406.

74 pd Lee Y.B., N. Lorenz, L. Kincaid Dick, and R. P. Dick. 2007. Cold storage and pretreatment incubation: Effects on soil microbial properties. Soil Sci. Soc. J. 71:1299–1305.

75 gsOchiai, N,, M. L. Powelson, F. J. Crowe and R.P. Dick. 2008. Green Manure Effects on Soil Quality in Relation to Suppression of Verticillium Wilt of Potatoes Biology and Fertility of Soils 91:400-406.

76 Lufafa, A., I. Diédhiou, S. Ndiaye, M. Séné, M. Khouma, F. Kizito, R.P. Dick, and J.S. Noller. 2008. Carbon stocks and patterns in native shrub communities of Sénégal’s Peanut Basin. Geoderma 146: 75-82

77 gsMoore-Kucera, J., and R. P. Dick . 2008. PLFA Profiling of Microbial Community Structure and Seasonal Shifts in Soils of a Douglas-Fir Chronosequence. Microbial Ecology 55:500–511.

78 gsMoore-Kucera, J., and R. P. Dick . 2008. Application of 13C-labeled litter and root materials for in situ decomposition studies using phospholipid fatty acids. Soil Biol. Biochem. 40:2485–2493

79 Gupta, V.V.S.R., R.P. Dick. and D.C. Colman. 2008. Functional microbial ecology: Molecular Approaches to microbial ecology and microbial habitats. Soil Biol.. Biochem. 40:1269 – 1271

80 gsDossa, E.L. M. Khouma, I. Diedhiou, M. Sene, F. Kizito, A.N. Badiane, S.A.N. Samba, and R.P. Dick. 2009. Carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus mineralization potential of semiarid Sahelian soils amended with native shrub residues Geoderma 148:251–260

81 gsDossa .E. L., J. Baham, M. Khouma, M. Sene, F. Kizito, R.P. Dick. 2009. Phosphorus Sorption and Desorption in Semiarid Soils of Senegal Amended with Native Shrub Residues Soil Science 173:669-682.

82 Lufafa, A.; Diedhiou, I.; Ndiaye, N.A.S.; Sene, M.; Kizito, F.; Dick, R.P.; Noller, J.S. 2009. Allometric relationships and peak-season community biomass stocks of native shrubs in Senegal's Peanut Basin. Journal of Arid Environments. 73:260-266

83 Diedhiou, S., A.N. Badiane, I. Diedhiou, M. Khoum, A.N.S Samba, M. Sène and R.P. Dick. 2009. Succession of Soil Microbial Communities during Decomposition of Native Shrub Litter of Semi-Arid Senegal. Pedobiologia 52:273—286.

Page 11: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

11

84 gsDossa , zE.L., S. Diedhiou, J. E. Compton , K. B. Assigbetse and R. P. Dick. 2010. Spatial patterns of P fractions and chemical properties in soils of two native shrub communities in Senegal. Plant Soil 327:185-198.

85 Kizito, M. I. Dragila, R. Brooks, M. Senè, M. Diop, R. Meinzer, A. Lufafa, I. Diedhiou, R. P. Dick. 2009. Hydraulic redistribution by two semi-arid shrubs: Implications on agro-ecosystems. J. Arid Environments (in press).

86 gsVallejo, F.E., Fabio Roldan and Richard P Dick. 2009. Soil enzymatic activities and microbial biomass in an integrated agroforestry chronosequence compared to monoculture and a native forest of Colombia. 2009. Biol. Fert. Soils. 46:577-587.

87 gsLina, LF, Ahmed F. Yousef, Joseph S. Mymryk, Warren A. Dick and Richard P. Dick. 2009. Stigmasterol and cholesterol regulate the expression of elicitin genes in Phytophthora sojae. J. Chem. Ecol. 35:824-832.

88 Feaga, J., R. P. Dick, and J.S. Selker. 2010. Eleven year study of nitrate leaching under vegetable production with cover crops. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 74: 186-195.

89 gsDossa, E.L., S. Diedhiou, J. E. Compton, K. B. Assigbetse and R. P. Dick. 2010. Spatial patterns of P fractions and chemical properties in soils of two native shrub communities in Senegal. Plant Soil. 327:185-198.

90 pdLorenz, N., K., Verdell, C. Ramsier, and R. P. Dick. 2010. A Rapid Assay to Estimate Soil Microbial Biomass Potassium in Agricultural Soils . Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 74:512–516.

91 gsYousef, LF, Warren A. Dick1, Richard P. Dick. 2011. Use of a 15N-tracer method as a tool to indicate the assimialtion of Elicitin-Sterol Complexes by Phytophthora sojae. International Journal of Biology. (in press).

92 vsChaudharyD.R., R.P. Dick*2 and N. Lorenz. 2011. FAME profiling of microbial community structure during Jatropha curcas L. residue decomposition. Soil Science (in press).

Books Dick, R. P. (ed). 2012). Methods of Soil Enzymology. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. Spec. Publ., Madison WI.

pp. 441. Burns, R. G., and R. P. Dick (eds). 2002. Enzymes in the Environment: Activity, Ecology, and

Applications. Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, NY. pp 614. Invited Book Chapters Dick, R. P. (author and co-edi.), D. Breakwill, and R. Turco. 1996. Soil enzyme activities and

biodiversity measurements as integrating biological indicators. In Doran et al. (eds.) Handbook of Methods for Assessment of Soil Quality. Spec. Pub. 49. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. Spec. Publ., Madison WI. pp. 247-272.

Dick, R. P. 1997. Enzyme activities as integrative indicators of soil health. In C. E. Parkhurst et al. (eds.) Bioindicators of Soil Health. CAB International, Oxon, United Kingdom pp. 121-156.

Dick, R.P., and E. Kandeler. 2005. Enzymes In Soils. In Daniel Hillel (ed.) Encyclopedia of Soils in the Environment. Elsevier Ltd., Oxford, U.K. pp. 448-455.

Kandeler, E., and R.P.Dick. 2007. Ch. 15, Soil Enzymes: Spatial distribution and Function in Agroecosystems. In G. Benckiser and S. Schnell (eds) Biodiversity in Agricultural Production Systems. CRC Taylor Francis 2007. p. 263-287.

Page 12: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

12

Joseph F. Donnermeyer Professor of Rural Sociology, Environmental Social Sciences School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University Education 1977 Ph.D. University of Kentucky, Lexington. Field of Study: Sociology Dissertation Title: "Social Status and Attitudinal Predictors of Residential Energy Consumption Behavior" 1975 M.A. University of Kentucky, Lexington. Field of Study: Sociology Thesis Title: "Post-Relocation Experiences of Forced Population Displacement: A Case Study in an Eastern Kentucky County" 1971 B.A. Thomas More College, Ft. Mitchell, Kentucky. Major: Sociology; Minors: Philosophy,

Theology Undergraduate Thesis Title: "Downward Mental Mobility Among College Students: An Analysis of Social Class Aspirations"

Academic and Administrative Appointments 1976 – 1979: Assistant Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics, Purdue University 1979 – 1983: Assistant Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology,

OSU 1983 – 1987: Director, National Rural Crime Prevention Center, Department of Agricultural

Economics and Rural Sociology, OSU 1983 – 1994: Associate Professor, Department of Agricultural Economic and Rural Sociology,

OSU 1987 – 1991: Co-Director, Leadership Education and Development (LEAD) program, College of

Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, OSU 1993 (Summer) Visiting Scholar, Tri-Ethnic Center for Prevention Research, Colorado State

University 1994 – 1999: Associate Professor, Department of Human and Community Resource Development

(HCRD), Rural Sociology Program, OSU 1999 – 2010: Professor, HCRD, Rural Sociology Program, OSU 1999 – present: Faculty Associate, Criminal Justice Research Center, OSU 2001-2005: Rural Sociology Program Area Leader and Director of Graduate Studies, Rural

Sociology 2005 – present: Adjunct Professor, University of New England, New South Wales, Australia 2010 – present: Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources, OSU Honors and Awards (selected listing) 1997: Rural Sociological Society, Excellence in Teaching 2000: Gamma Sigma Delta, The Teaching Award of Merit, College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, The Ohio State University 2004: The OSU Alumni Award for Distinguished Teaching, and member, OSU Academy of

Teaching 2010: Excellence in Teaching, Regional Award, Association of Public and Land-Grant

Universities 2006-2010: Chair, Executive Council, OSU Academy of Teaching 2010: Champion of Teaching, OSU Center for the Advancement of Teaching

Page 13: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

13

Funded Grants and Contracts: Principal/Co-Principal Investigator [Total Funding = $2,108,000] (selected listing) 1982-1984: Donnermeyer, Joseph F. "Property Crime Victimization Among Farm Operators."

Research grant received from the National Institute of Justice, U.S. Department of Justice. $145,000.

1996-1998: Donnermeyer, Joseph F. "Community Structure and Substance Use." USDA- National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program. $116,096.

1998-1999: Jobes, Patrick P. (P.I.), Joseph F. Donnermeyer, & Elaine M. Crosby. "A Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of the Relationship between Community Cohesiveness and Rural Crime." Criminology Research Council of Australia ($63,612 Au).

2000-2001: Barclay, Elaine (P.I.), Joseph F. Donnermeyer, & Patrick Jobes. "Property Crime Victimisation & Crime Prevention on Farms." New South Wales Attorney General.($76,019 Au).

2008-2009: Cooksey, Elizabeth and Joseph F. Donnermeyer. “Stability and Change of Amish Populations in the 21st Century.” National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. R03 grant. $100,000.

Publications: Author/Co-Author: 8 books, 24 book chapters, 62 journal articles, 12 PhD dissertations supervised (selected listing) Rural Crime: Carter, Timothy J., G. Howard Phillips, Joseph F. Donnermeyer and Todd N. Wurschmidt (eds.).

1983. Rural Crime: Integrating Research and Prevention. Totowa, NJ: Allanheld, Osmun and Company, Publishers. (16 chapters, 256 pages)

Donnermeyer, Joseph F. and G. Howard Phillips. 1984. "Vandals and Vandalism in the United States: A Rural Perspective." Chapter 9 (pp. 149 -163) in Claude Levy-Leboyer (ed.). Vandalism: Behaviour and Motivations. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: North Holland Publishing Company.

Donnermeyer, Joseph F. 1996. "The Social and Economic Costs of Drug Abuse." Chapter 9 in Zili Sloboda, Gayle Boyd and Elizabeth Robertson (eds.) Rural substance Abuse: State of Knowledge and Issues. Washington, DC: National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Donnermeyer, Joseph F., E.R. Getting, Barb Plested, Ruth W. Edwards, Pamela Thurman. 1997. "Community Readiness and Community Development: Designing Community-Based Prevention Education Programs." Journal of the Community Development Society. 28:66-83.

Oetting, Eugene R. and Joseph F. Donnermeyer. 1998. "Primary Socialization Theory: Basic Principles." Substance Use and Misuse (formerly The International Journal of the Addictions) (1st in a series of 4 articles on primary socialization theory). 33: 995-1026.

Weisheit, Ralph and Joseph F. Donnermeyer. 2000. "Changes and Continuity in Crime in Rural America." Pp. 309-357 in Criminal Justice 2000 Series. Volume 1, The Nature of Crime. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute on Justice. (Commissioned chapter)

Donnermeyer, Joseph F. and Scott D. Scheer. 2001. "Substance Use among Adolescents from Smaller Places.” Journal of Rural Health. 17: 105-114.

Edwards, Ruth W. and Joseph F. Donnermeyer (eds.). 2002. Rural Substance Use: An International Perspective. Substance Use and Misuse special issue (formerly The International Journal of the Addictions)

Jobes, Patrick C, Joseph F. Donnermeyer and Elaine M. Barclay. 2005. “A Tale of Two Towns: Social Structure, Integration and Crime in Rural New South Wales.” Sociologia Ruralis. 45:

Page 14: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

14

224-244. Donnermeyer, Joseph F., Pat Jobes and Elaine Barclay. 2006. “Rural Crime, Poverty, and

Community.” Pp. 199-218 in Walter S. DeKeseredy & Barbara Perry (eds.), Advancing Critical Criminology: Theory and Application. Lantham, MA.: Lexington Books.

Barclay, Elaine M., John Scott, Joseph F. Donnermeyer and Russell Hogg (eds.). 2007. Crime in Rural Australia: Integrating Theory, Research and Practice. Sydney, Australia: Federation Press. (13 chapters)

DeKeseredy, Walter, Joseph F. Donnermeyer, Martin D. Schwartz, Kenneth D. Tunnell, and Mandy Hall. 2007. “Thinking Critically About Rural Gender Relations: Toward a Rural Masculinity Crisis/Male Peer Support Model of Separation/Divorce Sexual Assault.” Critical Criminology, 15: 295-311.

Donnermeyer, Joseph F. and Walter Dekeseredy. 2008. “Toward a Rural Critical Criminology.” Southern Rural Sociology, 23: 4-28.

Donnermeyer, Joseph F., Pat Jobes and Elaine Barclay. 2009. “Sociological Theory, Social Change and Crime in Rural Communities.” Pp. 305 – 320 in Ann Denis and Dvorah Kalekin-Fishman (eds.), Contemporary Sociology: Conflict, Competition, and Cooperation. Los Angeles: Sage.

Donnermeyer, Joseph F., Elaine M. Barclay, and Daniel Mears. 2011. “Policing Agricultural Crime.” Pp. 193-204 in Rob I. Mawby and Richard Yarwood (eds.), Rural Policing and Policing the Rural. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company.

Other Peer-Reviewed Publications: Rogers, Everett M., Rabel J. Burdge, Peter F. Korsching and Joseph F. Donnermeyer. 1988. Social

Change in Rural Societies (3rd edition). Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall (16 chapters, 382 pages).

Kreps, George M., Joseph F. Donnermeyer, and Marty Kreps. 1994. "The Changing Occupational Structure of Amish Males." Rural Sociology. 59:693-707.

Wasao, Samson, and Joseph F. Donnermeyer. 1996. "An Analysis of Factors Related to Parity among the Amish in Northeast Ohio." Population Studies. 50: 235-246.

Kreps, George M., Joseph F. Donnermeyer, and Marty W. Kreps. 2004. A Quiet Moment in Time: A Contemporary View of the Amish. (2nd edition, 4th printing). Walnut Creek, Ohio: Carlisle Printing Company. (11 chapters, 157 pages).

Donnermeyer, Joseph F. and Elizabeth Cooksey. 2010. “On the Recent Growth of New Amish Settlements.” The Mennonite Quarterly Review, LXXXIV: 181-206.

Page 15: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

15

Earl F. Epstein Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources The Ohio State University 210 Kottman Hall Telephone 614-292-8654 2021 Coffey Road Fax 614-292-7432 Columbus, Ohio 43210 email [email protected] Education J.D. 1977 University of Wisconsin-Madison. Law Ph.D. 1968 University of Wisconsin-Madison. Physical Chemistry BS. 1961 Washington University (St. Louis). Chemical Engineering Academic Employment 1988- The Ohio State University. Columbus, OH. School of Natural Resources. Professor 1979-88 University of Maine. Orono, ME. Department of Civil & Surveying Engineering Professor, 1982-88; Associate Professor, 1979-82 1974-78 University of Wisconsin-Madison. Institute for Environmental Affairs: Research Associate, 1974-1977; Rockefeller Foundation Fellow in Environmental Affairs, 1978 1970-73 Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO. Department of Chemistry. Assistant Professor 1968-70 Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY. Department of Chemistry. Research Associate Other Professional Employment 1986-88 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Charting and Geodetic Services. Washington, D.C. Visiting Scientist (Professional Leave) 1978-79 Wisconsin Power and Light Company, Madison, WI. Environmental Attorney 1973-75 Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Consultant Research Interests Concepts of land and property; environment and resource law; land measurement and information law; resource policy Professional Societies Wisconsin Bar Association American Bar Association (ABA) Urban and Regional Information Systems Association (URISA) Honors Senior Fulbright Fellowship, Center for Property Studies, College of Law, University of New

Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, 2003 Rockefeller Foundation Fellow, 1978 Sigma Xi (Science Honorary Society), 1968 National Institutes of Health Predoctoral Fellow, 1967-1968 Tau Beta Pi (National Engineering Scholastic Society), 1961

Page 16: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

16

Publications-Chapters in Books Greg Elmes, Earl Epstein, Robert McMaster, Bernard Niemann, Barbara Poore, Eric Sheppard, and

David Tulloch, 2005. Chapter 10, “GIS and Society: Interrelation, Integration, and Transformation”. In: McMaster, R. and Usery, L. (eds.), A Research Agenda for Geographic Information Science, Taylor and Francis, distributed by CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, pp.287-312.

E. F. Epstein. 1995. “Control of Public Information”. A chapter in Institutions Sharing Information, Edited by H. J. Onsrud and G. Rushton. Papers prepared for the specialist's meeting sponsored by the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA). Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University Press. Chapter 17, pp. 307-318.

E. F. Epstein. 1993. “The Case Against Commercialization of Public Information.” in Marketing Government Information: Issues and Guidelines. Urban and Regional Information Systems Association (URISA). Washington, D.C. July, 1993. pp. 101-103.

Four chapters as senior author in Multipurpose Land Information Systems: The Guidebook published by the Federal Geodetic Control Committee of the United States government (A consortium of federal agencies, chaired by the Director of the Coast and Geodetic Survey in the Department of Commerce, including the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Transportation, Army Corps of Engineers, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Tennessee Valley Authority, and The International Boundary Commission): Chapter 1 "Introduction to Multipurpose Land Information Systems" with Patricia M. Brown Chapter 4 "Land Interests" with Patricia M. Brown Chapter 9 “Land Data: Types and Requirements" with Patricia M. Brown and D. David Moyer Chapter 13 "The Parcel Map" with D. David Moyer E. F. Epstein, 1991. “Legal Aspects of Spatial Information Systems”. A chapter in Geographical Information Systems: Principles and Applications, D. J. Maguire, M. Goodchild, and D. W. Rhind, eds., Vol. 1, pp. 489-502, London, Longman Group UK Ltd.

Page 17: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

17

Robert J. Gates Associate Professor of Wildlife Ecology and Management Phone: 614-292-9571 School of Environment and Natural Resources FAX: 614-292-7432 The Ohio State University E-mail: [email protected] 2021 Coffey Road Columbus, OH 43210-1085 Education Ph.D. 1989, Zoology 1989, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale M.S. 1984, Wildlife and Fisheries Management, Montana State University B.S. 1979, Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, South Dakota State University Employement 7/98-Present The Ohio State University (promoted to Associate Professor in 2001) 8/90-6/98 Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (promoted to Associate Professor in 1995) 1/89-5/90 Visiting Assistant Professor and Research Associate, Southern Illinois University at

Carbondale Research Interests Population-habitat relationships of terrestrial vertebrates. Ecology and management of migratory birds and wetlands-associated wildlife; wetlands ecology and management, wildlife diseases. Selected Professional Service Past President Ohio and Illinois Chapters of The Wildlife Society Past President, North-central Section of The Wildlife Society Upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes Region Joint Venture Technical Committee Selected Publications Murray, L.D., R. J. Gates, and R. M. Spinola. 2011. Evaluation of three methods to estimate density

and detectability from roadside point counts. Journal of Wildlife Management. 75:1072-1081. Spinola, R.M., and R.J. Gates. 2008. Population status and trends of Northern Bobwhite (Colinus

virginianus) in Ohio: 1984-2004. Ohio Journal of Science 108:26-30. Ramey, P.C., B.F. Blackwell, R.J. Gates, and R.D. Slemons. 2008. Efficacy of oral rabies

vaccination of a northern Ohio raccoon population: relevance of population density and pre-bait serology. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 44:553-568.

Downs, J.A., R.J. Gates, and A.T. Murray. 2008. Estimating carrying capacity for sandhill cranes using habitat suitability index and spatial optimization models. Ecological Modeling 214:284-292.

Brasher M. G., J. D. Steckel, and R. J. Gates. 2007. Energetic carrying capacity of actively and passively managed wetlands for migrating ducks in Ohio. Journal of Wildlife Management 71:2532-2541.

Roy-Nielsen C.L., R.J. Gates, and E.H. Zwicker. 2007. Projected availability of natural cavities for wood ducks in southern Illinois. Journal of Wildlife Management 71: 875-883.

Roy-Nielsen, C.L., P. G. Parker, and R. J. Gates. 2008. Partial clutch predation, dilution of predation risk, and the evolution of intraspecific nest parasitism. The Auk 125:679-686.

Roy-Nielsen, C.L., and R. J. Gates. 2007. Reduced nest predation of cavity nesting wood ducks during flooding in a bottomland hardwood forest. Condor 109: 210-215.

Page 18: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

18

Roy-Nielsen, C.L., P. G. Parker, and R.J. Gates. 2006. Intraspecific nest parasitism of cavity-

nesting wood ducks: costs & benefits to hosts and parasites. Animal Behaviour 72:917-926. Roy-Nielsen, C.L., R.J. Gates, and P.G. Parker. 2006. Intraspecific nest parasitism of wood ducks

in natural cavities: comparison with nest boxes. Journal of Wildlife Management 70:835-843. Welch, B.A., C.B. Davis, and R. J. Gates. 2006. Dominant environmental factors in wetland plant

communities invaded by Phragmites australis in East Harbor, Ohio USA. Wetlands Ecology and Management 14:511-525.

Gates, R. J., D. F. Caithamer, W. E. Moritz, and T. C. Tacha. 2001. Bioenergetics and nutrition of the Mississippi Valley Population of Canada geese during winter and migration. Wildlife Monographs No. 146. 65 pp.

Wheeler W.E., and R.J. Gates. 1999. Spatial and temporal variation in lead levels related to body condition in the Mississippi Valley Population of Canada geese. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 35: 178-186.

Gates, R. J., D. F. Caithamer, and T. C. Tacha. 1998. Bioenergetics of Canada geese during breeding and post-breeding in northern Ontario. Pages 323-335 in D. H. Rusch, M. D. Samuel, D. D. Humberg, and B. D. Sullivan, eds. Biology and Management of Canada geese. Proceedings International Canada Goose Symposium, Milwaukee, WI.

Ryan, D. C., R. J. Kawula, and R. J. Gates. 1998. Breeding biology of wood ducks using natural cavities in southern Illinois. Journal of Wildlife Management 62:112-123.

Caithamer D.F., R. J. Gates, and T. C. Tacha. 1996. A comparison of diurnal time budgets from paired Interior Canada Geese with and without offspring. Journal of Field Ornithology 67:105-113.

Caithamer, D.F., R. J. Gates, J.D. Hardy, and T. C. Tacha. 1993. Field identification of age and sex of interior Canada geese. Wildlife Society Bulletin 21:480-487.

Gates, R.J., D. F. Caithamer, T.C. Tacha, and C. R. Paine. 1993. The annual molt cycle of Branta canadensis-interior in relation to nutrient reserve dynamics. Condor 95:680-693.

Gates, R.J., A. Woolf , D. F. Caithamer, and W. E Moritz. 1992. Prevalence of spindle cell sarcomas among wild Canada geese from southern Illinois. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 28:666-668.

Relevant Research Projects Breeding ground derivation and distribution of mallards harvested in the U.S.; Breeding ecology of tree-nesting wood ducks in southern Illinois; Evaluation of managed and unmanaged wetlands as migratory bird habitat in the Upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes Region Joint Venture; Habitat relationships, migration, and recruitment of breeding sandhill cranes in Ohio; Habitat availability, utilization, and mass gain by migrating shorebirds in the southwestern Lake Erie region; Oral rabies vaccination of Ohio raccoons; Avian influenza virus in waterfowl and wetland systems; Population ecology and habitat relationships of northern bobwhites in Ohio. Research Funding Ohio Division of Federal Aid (P.R.) and State Wildlife Grants; Ducks Unlimited, Inc., Winous Point Marsh Conservancy, Upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes Region Joint Venture (USFWS), Consol Energy, Inc., Ohio Sea Grant.

Page 19: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

19

Teaching ENR 319, Introduction to Forestry Fisheries and Wildlife ENR 606.02, Natural Resource Management for Fisheries and Wildlife ENR 624, Wildlife Identification and Management ENR 662, Wildlife Ecology Methods ENR 822, Quantitative Methods for Natural Resources ENR 985, Natural Resources Paradigms.

Page 20: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

20

Stanley D. Gehrt Education

University of Missouri-Columbia Fisheries & Wildlife Ph.D. 1994 Emporia State University Biology M.S. 1988 Bethany College (KS) Biology B. A. 1983

Current Positions Associate Professor; School of Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio State University,

Columbus, Ohio Wildlife Extension Specialist; Ohio State University Extension, Ohio State University, Columbus,

Ohio Chair; Center for Wildlife Research, Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation, Dundee, Illinois Recent Refereed Publications Gross, J., F. Elvinger, L. L. Hungerford, and S. D. Gehrt. Accepted pending revision. Raccoon use

of the urban matrix in the Baltimore Metropolitan Area, Maryland. Urban Ecosystems. Titchenell, M., R.A. Williams, and S.D. Gehrt. 2011. Bat Response to Shelterwood Harvests and

Forest Structure in Oak-Hickory Forests. Forest Ecology and Management 262:980-988. Gehrt, S.D., C. Anchor, and J.L. Brown. 2011. Is the urban coyote a misanthropic synanthrope?

The case from Chicago. Cities and the Environment 4:Iss 1, Article 3 (online journal: http://digital commons.lmu.edu/cate/vol4/iss1/3.

Prange, S., S.D. Gehrt, and S.A. Hauver. 2011. Frequency and duration of contacts between free-ranging raccoons: uncovering a hidden fission-fusion system. Journal of Mammalogy, in press.

Graser, W.H., S.D. Gehrt, L.L. Hungerford, and C. Anchor. 2011. Variation in demographic patterns and population structure of raccoons across an urban landscape. Journal of Wildlife Management, in press.

Santonastaso, T., J. Dubach, S.A. Hauver, W.H. Graser, and S. D. Gehrt. 2011. Microsatellite analysis of raccoon (Procyon lotor) population structure across an extensive metropolitan landscape. Journal of Mammalogy, in press.

Hauver, S., S. Prange, J. Dubach, and S. D. Gehrt. Accepted pending revision. Dominance hierarchies in raccoons: Evidence for social complexity in a ‘solitary’ carnivore. Wildlife Research.

Gehrt, S. D, S.P.D. Riley, and B.L. Cypher, editors. 2010. Urban Carnivores: Ecology, Conflict, and Conservation. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD.

Gehrt, S. D., M.J. Kinsel, and C. Anchor. 2010. Parasite dynamics and morbidity of striped skunks in the absence of rabies. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 46:335-347.

Smith, D.A., and S.D. Gehrt. 2010. Bat response to woodland restoration within urban forest fragments. Restoration Ecology 18:914-923.

Hauver, S.A., S.D. Gehrt, S.Prange, and J. Dubach. 2010. Behavioral and genetic aspects of the raccoon mating system. Journal of Mammalogy 91:749-757.

Hauver, S.A., S.D. Gehrt, and S.Prange. 2010. Maternal behavior of raccoons and response of mothers to conspecific visits at natal dens. American Midland Naturalist 163:374-387.

Page 21: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

21

Recent Grants/Contracts 2007-2010. Cook County Animal Control. $730,000 for: Predator Ecology and Disease

Surveillance in Cook County. Gehrt-PI. 2009-2011. Forest Preserve District of Cook County. $180,000 for: Wildlife Disease Dynamics in

Cook County. Gehrt-PI. 2008-2011. Ohio Department of Transportation. $192,009 for Summer Ecology of Indiana Bats in

Ohio. Gehrt-PI. 2010-2012. Ohio Department of Natural Resources. $150,000 for Migration of Lasiurine Bats.

Gehrt-PI. 2010-2011. Lake County Department of Health. $60,000 for Disease Ecology of Feral Cats in

Lake County. Gehrt-PI. Examples of Synergistic Activities Public outreach and student training have been major components to my overall research program. I have integrated my research into an extension program of urban wildlife with local, regional, and national impact. In the last 5 years, I have published 16 extension publications and outreach articles, and delivered >150 extension presentations and workshops to >9,000 attendants at the local, state, regional, and national levels. In addition, extensive media coverage of my work has magnified the number of people I have reached through my extension/research. This coverage has generated numerous articles in multiple national/international newspapers, magazines, and interviews on national radio programs. Recently (2010-2011), my research has been featured on History Channel, Animal Planet, National Geographic (TV), CBC, and Discovery Channel. I developed a website that profiles my urban coyote research (www.urbancoyoteresearch.com). My urban research has supported 8 graduate students and for the past three years I have delivered a workshop for Project Exploration, a national program for minority female high school students. Professional Service Associate Editor (2009-present) for the Journal of Wildlife Management and Wildlife Research, and I previously served as AE for JWM(2002-2004); American Society of Mammalogists Grants-in-Aid Committee (2000-present); The Wildlife Society Jim McDonough Award Committee (2008, Chair 2009); I have served on 4 NSF panels, and as ad hoc reviewer for multiple other NSF proposals. I have served as reviewer for >25 journals. I developed and senior-edited the book Urban Carnivores (2010, Johns Hopkins University Press), I currently serve as Chair-elect for the Urban Wildlife Working Group of The Wildlife Society, and I served on the program committee for the International Urban Wildlife and Planning Conference, Austin, Texas, May 2011.

Page 22: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

22

P. Charles Goebel School of Environment & Natural Resources, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC), The Ohio State University, 1680 Madison Avenue, Wooster, Ohio 44691-4096 tel: (330)263-3789 • fax: (330)263-3658 • email: [email protected] Education Ph.D. -- School of Forestry & Wood Products, Michigan Technological University, 2001, Forest

Science. Dissertation title: Hydrogeomorphic controls on riparian areas of the northern Lake States. Advisor: Dr. Kurt S. Pregitzer.

M.S. -- School of Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, 1995, Natural Resources. Thesis title: Successional dynamics of mixed-oak forests in southeastern Ohio: A comparison of second-growth and old-growth forests. Advisor: Dr. David M. Hix.

B.S. -- Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, 1993, Forestry. (Minor: History). Professional Experience 2007-present Associate Professor, Forest Ecosystem Restoration and Ecology, School of

Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC), The Ohio State University.

2001-2007 Assistant Professor, Forest Ecosystem Restoration and Ecology, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC), The Ohio State University.

1998 Adjunct Instructor, Department of Geography, Northern Michigan University. 1995-1997 Research Technician III, Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center, Newton, GA. Selected Professional Recognition 2010 OARDC Distinguished Junior Faculty Research Award. 2008 2007 Refereed Journal Article Gold Award for paper entitled Maple syrup production in Ohio

and impact of Ohio State University (OSU) Extension Programming (Journal of Forestry. 104(2):94-101), Association of Natural Resource Extension Professionals (ANREP).

2001 Council of Graduate Schools (CGS)/University Microfilms International (UMI) Biological and Life Sciences Distinguished Dissertation Award Nominee, Michigan Technological University.

2001 Haakala Graduate Fellowship Award, Michigan Technological University. 2000 Horner Hardwood Research Award, School of Forestry & Wood Products, Michigan

Technological University. Selected Professional Service Associate Editor (Community Ecology; Vegetation Dynamics), Journal of the Torrey Botanical

Society. 2003-present. Associate Editor, Open Journal of Forestry. 2011-present. Panel Member. Joint Fire Science Program. Interagency Fire Center, Boise, ID. 2010 Panel Member. USDA Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture Research (TSTAR) Program.

University of Hawaii - Manoa. Honolulu, HI. 2009. Chair, Forest Ecology Working Group (C1), Society of American Foresters. 2007-2009.

Page 23: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

23

Selected Research Grants Awarded Total awarded - $4,867,342; $ 2,836,656 as lead PI (~58%). 1. 2010-2012. Fire science network and delivery system for fire-dependent ecosystems of the

northern Lake States. Joint Fire Science Program. Investigators: C. Goebel, E. Toman, D. Hix, R. Wilson, B. Palik, G. Corace, and R. Kolka. $397,827.

2. 2010-2012. Integrating fuels reduction and pine barrens restoration in endangered Kirtland's warbler habitat management. Joint Fire Science Program. Investigators: G. Corace, D. Kashian, and C. Goebel. $195,029.00.

3. 2009-2012. Designing effective land management policies for the 21st century Ohio River Basin: Managing the carbon and nutrient cycles to maintain and restore water quantity and quality. The Ohio State University, Targeted Investment in Excellence (TIE) Climate, Water, and Carbon (CWC) Program. Investigators: C. Goebel, E. Irwin, R. Moore, and R. Wilson. $1,299,911.00.

4. 2005-2008. Landscape scale disturbances in an agroecosystem: impacts on aquatic and riparian environments in the Sugar Creek Watershed, Ohio. USDA CSREES. Investigators: L. Williams, V. Bouchard, C. Goebel, R. Moore, D. Stinner. $590,000.

5. 2005-2006. Assessing the current status and restoration potential of riparian areas in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park. USDI National Park Service. Investigators: C. Goebel, K. Holmes, M. Semko-Duncan. $49,864 (Match of $25,000 provided by OARDC).

Selected Recent Publications (out of 37 total) 1. Rist, S.L., P.C. Goebel, R.G. Corace, III, D.M. Hix, I. Drobyshev, and T. Casselman. 2011. Do

partial cross sections from live trees for fire history analysis result in higher mortality 2 years after sampling? Forest Ecology and Management. 262:940-946.

2. Holmes, K.L., and P.C. Goebel. 2011. A functional approach to riparian area delineation using geospatial methods. Journal of Forestry. 109:233-241.

3. Martin, K.L., D.M. Hix, and P.C. Goebel. 2011. Coupling of vegetation layers and environmental influences in a mature, second-growth Central Hardwood forest landscape. Forest Ecology and Management. 261:720-729.

4. Goebel, P. C., M.S. Bumgardner, D.A. Herms, and A. Sabula. 2010. Failure to phytosanitize firewood infested with emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis) in a small dry kiln using ISPM-15 standards. Journal of Economic Entomology. 103:597-602.

5. Holmes, K.L., P.C. Goebel, and A.E.L. Morris. 2010. The distribution and characteristics of downed wood across headwater riparian ecotones: integrating the stream with the riparian area. Canadian Journal of Forest Research. 40: 1604-1614.

6. Drobyshev, I. V., P.C. Goebel, D.M. Hix, R.G. Corace, and M.E. Semko-Duncan. 2008. Fire history of red pine-dominated forest ecosystems of the Seney National Wildlife Refuge, Upper Michigan. Canadian Journal of Forest Research. 38:2497-2514.

Page 24: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

24

Jeffory A. Hattey Education

Ph.D. Agronomy, December 1993, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas M.S. Agronomy, May 1988, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas B.S. Agriculture; May 1985, Central Missouri State University, Warrensburg, Missouri

Employment and Professional Experience August 2011 to present: Assistant Dean of Academic Programs, College of Food, Agricultural and

Environmental Sciences; and Professor of Soil Science, in the School of Environment and Natural Resources; The Ohio State University

July 2009 to July 2011: Dillon and Lois Hodges Professor of International Agriculture, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences; Oklahoma State University

April 2005 to 2010: Director of Environmental Sciences Program, College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources; Oklahoma State University.

Nov. 1994 to 2011: Professor of Soil and Environmental Sciences, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences; Oklahoma State University

Dec. 1993 - Nov. 1994: Post-Doctoral Research Fellow; Soil/Environmental Chemistry; Agronomy and Soils Department; Auburn University, Auburn, AL

Publications Selected Refereed Publications (Total = 25) Booher, E.C.J., C.M. Greenwood and J.A. Hattey. 2011. Effects of Soil Amendments on Soil

Microarthropods in Continuous Maize in Western Oklahoma. J. Southwestern Ento. (accepted) Park S.C. J.D. Vitale, J.C. Turner, A. Stoecker, and J.A. Hattey. 2011. Economic Potential of

Intensified Forage Systems in the Southern Plains. J. Am. Soc. Farm Mgnt Rural Appr. 74:99-121.

Schroder, J., J. Richards, H. Zhang, J. A. Hattey W.R. Raun, and M, Payton. 2011. Micronutrient Availability As Affected By the Long-Term Application of Phosphorus Fertilizer and Organic Amendments. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 75:927-939. doi: 10.2136/sssaj2010.0269 .

Janzen, H. H., P.E. Fixen, A. J. Franzluebbers, J. Hattey, R. C. Izaurralde, Q. M. Ketterings, D. A. Lobb, and W. H. Schlesinger. 2011. Global Prospects Rooted in Soil Science. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 75:1-8. doi:10.2136/sssaj2009.0216 .

Turner, J.C., J.A. Hattey, J.G. Warren, and C.J. Penn. 2010. Electrical Conductivity and Sodium Adsorption Ratio Changes Following Annual Applications of Animal Manure Amendments. Comm. Soil Sci. Plant Anal. 41:1043-1060.

Ferris, D.R., J.A. Hattey, and M.D. Mullen. 2010. The Soil Science Profession: Investment, Vestment and Validation. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 74:453-460. doi:10.2136/sssaj2009.0172 .

Park, S.C. J.D. Vitale, J.C. Turner, J.A. Hattey, and A. Stoecker. 2010. Economic Profitability of Sustained Application of Swine Lagoon Effluent and Beef Feedlot Manure Relative to Anhydrous Ammonia in the Oklahoma Panhandle. Agron. J. 102:420-430. doi:10.2134/agronj2009.0166

Patton, J.J. and J.A. Hattey. 2009. A Mixed Methods Evaluation of the Computer Applet Soil Temperature Changes with Depth and Time as an Undergraduate Teaching Tool. NACTA J. 53:7-13.

Page 25: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

25

Carreira, R.I., A.L. Stoecker, F.M. Epplin, J.A. Hattey, and M.A. Kizer. 2006. Subsurface drip

irrigation versus center pivot sprinkler for applying swine effluent to corn. J. Agric Applied Econ. 38(3) 645-658.

Warren, J.G., J.A. Hattey, J.C. Turner, and S.B. Phillips. 2006. Comparison of two micrometeorological methods to determine ammonia volatilization from lagoon swine effluent. Comm. Soil Sci. Plant Anal. 37:1339-1356.

Springer, T.L., C.M. Taliaferro, and J.A. Hattey. 2005. Nitrogen source and rate effects on the production of buffalograss forage grown with irrigation. Crop Sci. 45:668-672.

Wu, J., D. L. Nofziger, J. G. Warren, and J. A. Hattey. 2003. Estimating ammonia volatilization from swine-effluent droplets in sprinkle irrigation. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 67:1352-1360.

Wu, J., D. L. Nofziger, J. G. Warren, and J. A. Hattey. 2003. Modeling ammonia volatilization from surface-applied swine effluent. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 67:1-11

Zhang, H. and J.A. Hattey. 2000. Open-Vessel microwave digestion of animal waste samples for multi-element analysis. Commun. Soil Sci. Plant Anal. 31:2959-2967.

Millmier, A., J. Lorimor, C. Hurburgh, C. Fulhage, J. Hattey, and H. Zhang. 2000. Near-infrared sensing of manure nutrients. Trans. ASAE 43:903-908. ASAE National Blue Ribbon paper winner.

Books and Book Chapters

Five books, three as senior author and three book chapters.

Proceedings or Outreach Publications Seventeen published proceedings and 42 outreach publications.

Published Abstracts

A total of 86 published abstracts. Grantsmenship

Twenty-eight funded proposals for more than $4.1 million. Presentations

Twenty invited publications and a total of 105 presentations. Awards and Honors

Soil Science Education Award from the Soil Science Society of America, 2010; United States Department of Agriculture Food and Agricultural Sciences Excellence in Teaching Award, Southern Region 2008; Regents Distinguished Teaching Award, Oklahoma State University, 2007; North American Colleges & Teachers of Agriculture, Southern Region Outstanding Teacher, 2005; National Association of Colleges & Teachers of Agriculture, Teacher Fellow, 2000.

Teaching Experience

Fundamentals of Soil Science, 33 semesters; Professional Development, 8 semesters; Soil and Water Conservation, 17 semesters; Dynamics of Wetland, Forest and Range Soils, 7 semesters; Animal Waste Management, 9 semesters; Environmental Science Problems and Applications, 5 semesters; Graduate Seminar, 8 semesters.

Page 26: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

26

International Activities Led study abroad to Njala University, Sierra Leone with 16 students August 2010 and March 2011. Taught Residue and Waste Management Course. UNESP-Botucatu Brazil. July 2008 and

December 2010. Graduate course for master’s and doctoral students at São Paulo State University.

Invited speaker at the University of Burundi, Burundi Africa. October, 2008. Presentation to administration and faculty on “Improving Critical Thinking Skills in Higher Education”.

August 2008 to 2011: Team Leader for Oklahoma State University-Moi University, Partnership “”Kenyan Cotton Industry Revitalization Project

Hattey, J.A. 2006. Developing Critical Thinking and Professionalism in Undergraduate Education. Invited Speaker. University of Burundi, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization-Burundi, and Institut des Sciences Agronomiques du Burundi (ISABU).

Hattey, J.A. 2006. Residue and Waste Management. Invited Speaker. University of Burundi, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization-Burundi, and Institut des Sciences Agronomiques du Burundi (ISABU).

Hattey, J.A. 2006. Soil Erosion and Control. Invited Speaker. University of Burundi, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization-Burundi, and Institut des Sciences Agronomiques du Burundi (ISABU).

Hattey, J.A. 2001 Workshop on development of educational training modules for international programs. 17-22 March 2002. CIMMYT, Ciudad de Obregon, Mexico.

Memberships and Activities

American Society of Agronomy Soil Science Society of America Gamma Sigma Delta, Sigma Xi Soil and Water Conservation Society North American Colleges & Teachers of Agriculture

Page 27: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

27

David Matthew Hix Associate Professor School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University 2021 Coffey Road, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1085 (614) 292-1394 Education Ph.D. 1988 University of Wisconsin - Madison. Major: Forestry (Silviculture and Forest

Ecology) M.S. 1983 University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. Major: Natural Resources (Forest Ecology and

Silviculture) B.S. 1980 University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. Major: Forestry (with Distinction) Professional Academic Employment 1991-present The Ohio State University, School of Environment and Natural Resources 1989-1991 West Virginia University, Division of Forestry - Assistant Professor, Silviculture Recent Courses Taught ENR 733, Successional Dynamics of Forests. 5 credit hours ENR 333, Silviculture. 5 credit hours ENR 322, Forest Ecosystems. 5 credit hours ENR 221, Biology and Identification of Woody Forest Plants. 5 credit hours ENR 119.02, Professional Survey of Forestry, Fisheries, and Wildlife. 1 credit hour Recent Publications Peer-Referred Journal Articles Martin, K.L. Hix, D.M., Goebel, P.C. 2011. Coupling of vegetation layers and environmental

influences in a mature, second-growth Central Hardwood forest landscape. Forest Ecology and Management 261:720-729.

Rist, S.G., Goebel, P.C., Corace, R.G., Hix, D.M., Drobyshev, I., and Casselman, T. 2011. Do partial cross sections from live trees for fire history analysis result in higher mortality 2 years after sampling? Forest Ecology and Management 262:940-946.

Corace, R.G., Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., Casselman, T., and Seefelt, N.E. 2009. Ecological forestry at National Wildlife Refuges: experiences from Seney National Wildlife Refuge and Kirtland’s Warbler Wildlife Management Area, USA. Forestry Chronicle 85:695-701.

Wilson, R.S., Hix, D.M., Goebel, P.C., and Corace, R.G. 2009. Identifying land manager objectives and alternatives for mixed-pine forest ecosystem management and restoration in eastern Upper Michigan. Ecological Restoration 27:407-416.

Drobyshev, I.V., Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., Corace, R.G., and Semko Duncan, M.E. 2008. Interactions among forest composition, structure, fuel loadings and fire history: a case study of red pine-dominated forests of Seney National Wildlife Refuge, Upper Michigan. Forest Ecology and Management 256:1723-1733.

Drobyshev, I.V., Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., Corace, R.G., and Semko Duncan, M.E. 2008. Pre- and post-European settlement fire history of red pine-dominated forest ecosystems of Seney National Wildlife Refuge, Upper Michigan. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 38:2497-2514.

Page 28: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

28

Holmes, K.L., Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., Dygert, C. E., and Semko-Duncan, M.E. 2005.

Ground-flora composition and structure of floodplain and upland landforms of an old-growth headwater forest in north-central Ohio. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 132:62-71.

Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., and Semko-Duncan, M.E. 2005. Composition and structure of two old-growth forest ecosystem types of southeastern Ohio. Ohio Journal of Science 105:8-16.

Other Hix, D.M., Goebel, P.C., and Whitman, H. L. 2011. Canopy gap characteristics of an old-growth

and an adjacent second-growth beech-maple stand in north-central Ohio. In: Proceedings of the 17th Central Hardwood Forest Conference. Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-P-78. Newtown Square, PA: U.S.D.A., Forest Service, Northern Research Station. : pp. 177-185.

Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., and Whitman, H.L. 2011. Composition and structure of riparian areas along a land-use gradient in an agricultural watershed of northeastern Ohio. In: Proceedings of the 17th Central Hardwood Forest Conference. Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-P-78. Newtown Square, PA: U.S.D.A., Forest Service, Northern Research Station. : pp. 186-196.

Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., Wilson, R.S., and Corace, R.G. 2009. Linking ecological and structured decision-making networks to develop local- and landscape-scale restoration strategies for mixed-pine forests of Upper Michigan, USA. In: Proceedings, Ecological Networks: Science and Practice, 16th Annual Conference of the International Association of Landscape Ecology (UK Chapter). Edinburgh University, Scotland, United Kingdom. pp. 28-29.

Goebel, P. C., Hix, D. M. 2008. Crall Woods. In: Proceedings, 2008 Central States Forest Soils Conference. The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH. pp. 28-29.

Goebel, P. C., Hix, D. M. 2008 Forest stand dynamics at Crall Woods. In: Proceedings, 2008 Central States Forest Soils Conference. The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH. pp. 32-37.

Colwell, S. R., and Hix, D. M. 2008. Adaptation of the QBR Index for use in riparian forests of central Ohio. In: Proceedings, 16th Central Hardwood Forest Conference. Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-P-24. Newtown Square, PA. pp. 331-340.

Hix, D.M., Lorimer, C.G., Guries, R.P., and Kotar, J. 2005. A guide for classifying and managing forest sites in the Kickapoo River Watershed of southwestern Wisconsin. College of Agricultural and Life Sciences Research Report. University of Wisconsin-Madison. 68 pp.

Papers Presented Recently Goebel, P.C., and Hix, D.M. 2010. Revisiting the past to improve the future: legacy of OARDC

research on mined-land reclamation. Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting. Pittsburgh, PA.

Corace, R.G., P.C. Goebel, and D.M. Hix. 2010. Implementing ecological forestry concepts at US Fish and Wildlife National Wildlife Refuges in the northern Lake States, USA. IUFRO Landscape Ecology International Conference - Forest landscapes and global change: New frontiers in management, conservation and restoration. Bragança, Portugal.

Goebel, P.C., Hix, D.M., Corace, R.G., and Wilson, R.S. 2009. A requiem or renaissance for mixed-pine forest ecosystems of the northern Lake States, USA? North Highlands College, Thurso, Scotland, United Kingdom.

Goebel, P. C., Hix, D. M., Corace, R. G., and Wilson, R.S. 2009. Restoration-based fuel reduction recommendations for mixed-pine forests of Upper Michigan. 4th International Fire Congress, Savannah, GA.

Page 29: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

29

Hix, D. M., Goebel, P. C., Wilson, R., Drobyshev, I., Corace, R. G., and Rist, S. G. 2008. Using fire history, vegetation and risk analyses to develop integrated strategies for mixed-pine forest restoration in Upper Michigan. Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, Milwaukee, WI.

Hix, D. M. 2008. Forests of Ohio. Central States Forest Soils Conference, Belleville, OH. Rist, S. G., Goebel, P. C., Hix, D. M., and Corace, R. G. 2007. Historical forest management on

national wildlife refuges: a case study. Society of American Foresters National Convention, Portland, OR.

Pinheiro, N., Drobyshev, I., Goebel, P. C., Semko-Duncan, M. E., Holmes, K. L., and Hix, D. M. 2007. Composition, structure, and history of an old-growth beech-maple forest of the lower Great Lakes region, USA. Sixth North American Forest Ecology Workshop. Vancouver, BC, Canada.

Hix, D. M., Goebel, P. C., Brown, J., Vimmerstedt, J. V., and Emmons, J. 2006. Past and future research efforts on mined-land reclamation and reforestation in Ohio. Society of American Foresters National Convention, Pittsburgh, PA.

Recent Awards Rodney F. Plimpton Outstanding Teacher Award. The Ohio State University, College of Food,

Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences, 2005. Semi-finalist for the 2005 Ohio State University Alumni Award for Distinguished University

Teaching, 2005. Pomerene Teaching Award, The Ohio State University, College of Food, Agricultural, and

Environmental Sciences, 2004. Recent Research Grants 2009 - present "Fuel treatments in mixed-pine forests in the Great Lakes region: A comprehensive

guide to planning and implementation." USDA/USDI Inter-agency Joint Fire Science Program. 2009 - present "Developing a fire science network and delivery system to enhance the management

and restoration of fire-dependent forest ecosystems of the northern Lake States." USDA/USDI Inter-agency Joint Fire Science Program.

2009 - present "Potential implications of hemlock woolly adelgid infestation on plant diversity and stand dynamics of eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis (L.) Carr) forest ecosystems of Ohio." McIntire-Stennis Research Project.

2005-09 “Restoration-based fuel reduction recommendations for mixed-pine forests of Upper Michigan.” USDA/USDI Inter-agency Joint Fire Science Program.

Recent Committee Assignments OSU Forests, Management & Operations SENR Promotion & Tenure Oversight SENR Academic Affairs SENR Teaching Associate Development & Enhancement SENR Faculty Search Committee, Forest Operations & Products Natural Resources Graduate Studies Committee; Chair (2006-7) CFAES Library Committee; Chair (2005-7)

Page 30: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

30

Tomas M. Koontz School of Environment & Natural Resources, Ohio State Univ., 210 Kottman Hall, 2021 Coffey Rd., Columbus, OH 43210; 614-688-8166, [email protected]; http://go.osu.edu/TomasKoontz Education Ph.D. in Public Policy, 1997 Indiana University: Dept of Political Science and School of Public & Environmental Affairs M.P.A in Environmental Policy & Natural Resource Management with Honors, 1993 Indiana University: School of Public and Environmental Affairs B.A. in Business Administration with Honors, French minor, 1989 University of Puget Sound (Tacoma, Washington) Research/Professional Experience Visiting Scholar, 2011 Institute for Sustainability Communication, Leuphana University, Luneburg, Germany Assistant/Associate/Full Professor, 1998/2004/2011-present The Ohio State University, School of Environment and Natural Resources Affiliated Faculty, 2005-present The Ohio State University, John Glenn School of Public Affairs Post-doctoral Research Associate, 1997-98 Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change, Indiana University Refereed Journal Publications (past 2 years) Koontz, Tomas M. and Kathryn M. Plank. In press. “Can Reading Questions Foster Active

Learning? A Study of Six College Courses.” Journal on Excellence in College Teaching. Hauser, Bradley K., Tomas M. Koontz, and Jeremy T. Bruskotter. In press.“Volunteer Participation

in Collaborative Watershed Partnerships: Insights from the Theory of Planned Behavior.” Journal of Environmental Planning and Management.

Campbell, Joseph T., Tomas M. Koontz, and Joseph E. Bonnell. In press. “Does Collaboration Promote Grassroots Behavior Change? Farmer Adoption of Best Management Practices in Two Watersheds.” Society and Natural Resources.

Robinson, Cathy J., Richard D. Margerum, Tomas M. Koontz, Cassandra Moseley, and Sue Lurie. 2011. “Policy-level collaboratives for environmental management at the regional scale: Lessons and challenges from Australia and the United States.” Society and Natural Resources.

Thomas, Craig W. and Tomas M. Koontz. 2011. “Research Designs for Examining the Impact of Community-based Management on Natural Resource Conservation.” Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research 3(2):97-111.

Wiener, Joshua G. and Tomas M. Koontz. 2010. “Shifting winds: Explaining variation in state policies to promote small-scale wind energy.” Policy Studies Journal 38(4):629-651.

Hardy, Scott D. and Tomas M. Koontz. 2010. “Collaborative Watershed Partnerships in Urban and Rural Areas: Different Pathways to Success?” Landscape and Urban Planning 95: 79-90.

Scholarly Books Koontz, Tomas M., Toddi A. Steelman, JoAnn Carmin, Katrina Smith Korfmacher, Cassandra

Moseley, and Craig W. Thomas. 2004. Collaborative Environmental Management: What Roles for Government? Washington, D.C: Resources for the Future Press.

Page 31: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

31

Koontz, Tomas M. 2002. Federalism in the Forest: National versus State Natural Resource Policy. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, American Governance and Policy series.

Recent Conference Participation and Invited Presentations (past year) Koontz, Tomas M. 2011. “An Introduction to the Institutional Anaysis and Development

Framework for Forest Management Research.” Humboldt University, Division of Natural Resource Economics, Berlin, Germany, June 8.

Koontz, Tomas M. 2011. “Collaborative Watershed Management: Social Science Research from Across the Pond.” University of Cambridge, Geography Dept., Cambridge, U.K., May 11

Koontz, Tomas M. 2011. “Qualitative Research in Social Science.” Jawarlahal Nehru University, New Delhi, India, January 17.

Koontz, Tomas M. and Sucharita Sen. 2011. “Community Responses to Government Defunding of Water Projects: A Comparative Study in India and the USA.” Presentation at the biennial meeting of the International Association for the Study of the Commons, Hyderabad, India, January 10-14.

Competitive Grants Received (past 3 years) Co-Investigator. O.S.U. Climate, Water, and Carbon Initiative. 2008-2013. “Designing effective

land management policies for the 21st century Ohio River Basin: Managing the carbon and nutrient cycles to maintain and restore water quantity and quality,” $1,299,911.

Principal Investigator. O.S.U. Climate, Water, and Carbon Initiative. 2007-2008, “Policy Research on Complex Coastal/Estuary Resources,” $44,223.

Selected Leadership and Professional Activities (past 2 years) Editorial Board member, Policy Studies Journal, 2010-present Editorial Board member, Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 2009-present Associate Editor for Policy, Journal of Forestry, 2005-2010 Chair, School of Env. and Natural Resources Academic Affairs Committee, 2007 – present Recent Honors and Awards Plimpton Outstanding Teaching Award, 2007, College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental

Sciences, The Ohio State University (selected from over 200 College faculty). Price Advising Award, 2007, College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, The Ohio

State University ($500 award).

Page 32: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

32

Rattan Lal School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 43210 lal.1 @osu.edu / Phone: 614-292-9069

Citizenship U.S.A. Date of Birth: 5 September, 1944 Education B.Sc. (Agric.), 1963, PAU, India; M. Sc. (Soils), 1965, IARI, India; Ph.D. (Soils), 1968, OSU, Columbus, OH, USA Language Proficiency English, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, French (fair) Professional Positions Held 1963 - 1965 Research Assistant, The Rockefeller Foundation, New Delhi, India 1966 - 1968 Research Assistant, OARDC, Wooster, OH, U.S.A. 1968 - 1969 Senior Research Fellow, University of Sydney, Australia 1970 - 1987 Soil Physicist, IITA, Ibadan, Nigeria 1987 - 1989 Assoc. Professor, Soil Science, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 1989 - to date Prof. Soil Science, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 2001 - to date Director, Carbon Mgt. & Sequestration Center, OARDC/OSU, Cols., OH 2009 - to date Adjunct Professor, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland 2011 - to date Distinguished University Professor of Soil Science

Additional Administrative Experience 1981 - 1984 Chair, International Committee on Tropical Deforestation and Land

Development, IITA, Ibadan, Nigeria 1984 - 1987 Co-Chair, Tropical Land Clearing for Sustainable Agriculture, IBSRAM

Network, Thailand Service to Professional Organizations 1982 - 1987 Vice President, International Commission on Continental Erosion 1987 - 1990 President, World Association of Soil and Water Conservation 1988 - 1991 President, International Soil Tillage Research Organization 1990 - 1992 Member NRC/NAS Panel on Vetiveria, NRC, Washington, D.C. 1990 - 1993 Member NRC/NAS Panel on Sustainable Agric., NRC, Washington, D.C. 1993 - 1996 Corresponding author, IPCC Working Group II: Geneva, Switzerland 1998 - 2000 Lead Author, IPCC Special Report, LULUCF, Geneva, Switzerland 1998 - 2002 Member, U.S. Nat'l Comm. on Soil Sci., Nat'l Acad. Sci., Washington, D.C. 2000 - to date Member, Review Panel, Environment Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory,

New Mexico 2000 - to date Editor-in-Chief, Encyclopedia of Soil Science, Dekker, NY 2003 - 2005 Lead Author, U.N. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2004 - to date Co-Editor-in-Chief, Soil & Tillage Research, Elsevier, Holland 2006 - to date Editor for the Americas, Land Degradation & Development, J. Wiley & Sons, U.K. 2006 - 2007 President, Soil Science Society of America 2007 - 2008 Member NRC/NAS Panel on Africa and Asia, NRC/NAS, Washington, D.C. 2007- to date Member, U.S. National Committee on Soil Science, National Academy of Sciences,

Washington, D.C. 2008- to date Editor In Chief, Advances in Soil Science, Taylor and Francis

Page 33: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

33

Current Funding Support and Collaboration (Total Grants Received Since 1982 = US $37 millions) (i) U.S. Government and Foundations: USDA (NRCS, ERS, CSREES), USAID, USDOE, US

State Dept., US-EPA, The Rockefeller Foundation, TIE/CWC-OSU (ii) Industry: Monsanto, Corn Growers Assoc., Soybean Growers Assoc., AEP, Ohio Coal

Development, Tata Trust (iii) National Laboratory: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory,

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Battelle, Brookhaven National Laboratory. Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago, IL

Awards and Honors • Matriculation, Punjab University, highest GPA in the 1959 (Valedictorian) class, Highest GPA

BSc (Valedictorian) from PAU, 1963 Class, Gold Medalist • Gold medal, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, highest GPA in the 1965 MSc.

(Valedictorian) class • Member, Sigma Xi, Ohio Chapter (1968), International Award, Ohio Chapter 1998 • Fellow: Am. Soc. Agron. (1985), Soil Sci. Soc. Am. (1986), Third World Acad. Sci. (1992),

Am. Assoc, Adv. Sci. (1996), Soil Water Conservation Society (1997), National Academy of Agricultural Sciences of India, (1998)

• International Soil Science Award (1988); Soil Science Applied Research Award (1992); and Soil Science Research Award (2002) of Soil Science Society of America

• Hugh Hammond Bennett Award, Soil Water Conservation Society (1998) • Int'l Agron. Award (1995), Environment Quality Award (2004), and Carl Sprengel Agronomic

Research Award (2005) of American Society of Agronomy • Distinguished Scholar Award (1994); University Distinguished Lecture (2000), The Ohio

State University • Distinguished Alumni Award, Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, India (1998) • Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, India (2001) • Scroll of Honor, Haryana Agricultural University, Hisar, India (2001) • Norman Borlaug Award, IARI, New Delhi, India (2005) • Zayed Prize Diploma of Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005) • Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, Norwegian Univ. of Life Sciences, Aas, Norway (2005) • Liebig Award, International Union of Soil Sciences, Wageningen, Holland (2006) • Presidential Lecture, Current Trends, Chaired by Pres. Grimsson of Iceland, Reykjawick,

Iceland(10 May 2006) • IPCC - 2007 Nobel Peace Prize Certificate • Cordban Award 2008, University of Cordoba, Spain • COMLAND 2009 Award, Commission on Land Degradation & Desertification: Magdeburg,

Germany • M.S. Swaminathan Award, 12 August 2009, New Delhi, India • Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, Alecu Russo Balti State University, Republic of

Moldova (2010) Graduate Students. Postdoctoral Fellows and Visiting Scientists Supervised M. Sc: 56 Ph. D: 46 Postdoctoral Fellows: 44 Visiting Scientists & Special Trainees: 85

Page 34: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

34

Publications Books written: 15 Refereed journal articles: 620 Reviews and keynote papers: 303 Books edited: 50 Chapters in multi-authored books: 350 Miscellaneous: 198 Science Citation h-Index: 44 Total Publications: 1541 Testimony to U.S. Congressional Briefings and Senate Hearings 1. Lal, R, 1999. Policy implications for soil carbon sequestration. Congressional Briefing, 3

August 1999, Hart Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 2. Lal, R. 1999. Soil management for achieving global food security and mitigating the

greenhouse effect. Cannon House Office Building, 18 October 1999, Washington, D.C. 3. Lal, R. 2001. Importance of soil carbon in mitigating global warming. Senate Hearing, EPW

Committee. Senate Office Building, 30 April 2001, Washington, D.C. 4. Lal, R. 2000. Senate Agricultural Sub-Committee, 4 May, 2000, Washington, D.C. 5. Lal, R. 2001. Soil Carbon sequestration and climate change. Senate Hearing. Science and

Technical Sub-Committee, 24, May, 2001, Washington, D.C. 6. Lal, R. 2003. Potential of agricultural sequestration to address climate change. Senate

Committee on Environments and Public Works. 8 July 2003, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.

7. Lal, R. 2006 .House Soil Caucus, 8 December, Cannon House Office Building, Washington, D.C. Soils Resolution As President of the Soil Science Society of America (2007), Prof. Lal spearheaded the “Soils Resolution” for adoption by the U.S. Senate. The Resolution “Recognizing Soils As An Essential Natural Resource” (S.R. 401) was adopted unanimously by the U.S. Senate on 23 June, 2008. This Resolution is the first of its kind adopted by any government.

Page 35: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

35

Kristi S. Lekies The Ohio State University School of Environment and Natural Resources 320C Kottman Hall, 2021 Coffey Road, Columbus, OH 43210 (614)-688-3537 phone; (614)-292-7432 fax; [email protected] Education Ph.D., Human Development and Family Studies, Iowa State University, 1998 M.S., Home Economics/Child and Family Services, University of Wisconsin-Stout, 1993 B.A., Social Work, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1986 Professional Experience July 2010- Assistant Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources present State Specialist, Leadership Development and Program Evaluation The Ohio State University/Ohio State University Extension 2007-2010 Assistant Professor, Dept. of Human and Community Resource Development State Specialist, Leadership Development and Program Evaluation The Ohio State University/Ohio State University Extension 2006-2007 Assistant Professor/State Specialist, Research and Program Evaluation 4-H Youth Development, Ohio State University Extension 1998-2006 Associate Director/Research Associate

Cornell Early Childhood Program, Cornell University 1993-1998 Research Assistant

Child Welfare Research and Training Project, Iowa State University 1987-1992 Social Worker – Child and Adolescent Services/Foster Home Coordinator Polk County (Wisconsin) Department of Social Services Research Support Principal Investigator: Morton, L.W.; Co-Principal Investigators: Lal, R., Lauer, J. G., Kladivko,

E. J., Scharf, P. C., Arritt, R. W., Nkongolo, N. V., Moore, R. H., Arbuckle, J. G., Anex, R. P., Bonta, J. V., Castellano, M. J., Fausey, N. R., Helmers, M. J., Kravchenko, A. N., Nafziger, E. D., Sawyer, J. E., Strock, J. S., Todey, D. P., Tyndall, J. C., Lekies, K. S. (2011-2016). “Climate Change, Mitigation, and Adaptation in Corn-Based Cropping Systems,” $19,992,144. National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U. S. Department of Agriculture.

Co-Principal Investigators: Lekies, K. S., & Bean Smith, M. “Developing Agricultural Leadership: The Impact of 4-H Youth Engagement in Local Food Systems,” Ohio 4-H Foundation, $3108, 2010-2011.

Principal Investigator: Ferrari, T. M.; Co-Principal Investigators: Lekies, K. S., Bloir, K., and Arnett, N. “Ohio Families and Youth Initiative,” Children, Youth, and Families at Risk, Cooperative State Research Education and Extension Service/U.S. Department of Agriculture, $134,000, 2007-2008.

Extension Responsibilities Executive Producer, Youth Beat Radio, WCRS-FM Columbus, 2009-present Provide training for Extension educators on program evaluation, grant writing, and data analysis

Page 36: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

36

Teaching Responsibilities Rural Sociology 105, Introduction to Rural Sociology – 2011-Present Environment and Natural Resources 222, Data Analysis – 2010-Present Agricultural and Extension Education 770, Program Evaluation – 2008-2010 Agricultural and Extension Education 794, Grant Proposal Writing – 2008-2010 Professional Service American Evaluation Association: Member Quantitative Methods, Teaching of Evaluation, and

Environmental Evaluation Topical Interest Groups, 2007-present Rural Sociological Society: Chair, Applied and Extension Research Interest Group, 2009-present

Society and Natural Resources; Children, Youth, and Environments: Manuscript reviewer Recent Publications Lekies, K. S. (forthcoming). Connection to place: Exploring community satisfaction and

attachment among rural youth. Children, Youth, and Environments. Lekies, K. S., & Whitworth, B. (2011). Constructing the nature experience: A semiotic

examination of signs on the trail. The American Sociologist, 42, 249-260. Lekies, K. S., & Bennett, A. (2011). The evaluation attitudes and practices of Ohio 4-H educators.

Journal of Extension, 49(1). http://www.joe.org/joe/2011february/rb2.php Ferrari, T. M., Lekies, K. S., & Arnett, N. (2009). Opportunities matter: Exploring youth’s

perspectives on their long-term participation in an urban 4-H youth development program. Journal of Youth Development 4(3) http://www.nae4ha.org/directory/jyd/

Lekies, K. S., Baker, B., & Baldini, J. (2009). Assessing participation in Youth Community action projects: Opportunities and barriers. Community Development: Journal of the Community Development Society, 40, 346-358.

Lekies, K. S. (2009). Youth engagement in the community: The ethics of inclusion and exclusion. Les Atheliers de L’ethique, 4(1), 156-164. http://www.creum.umontreal.ca/IMG/pdf_16_Lekies.pdf

Lekies, K. S., & Eames-Sheavly, M. (2008). Evaluating an initiative to increase youth participation in school and community gardening activities. Journal of Youth Development, 3(2), http://www.nae4ha.org/directory/jyd/

Lekies, K. S., Eames-Sheavly, M., MacDonald, L., & Wong, K. J. (2007). Greener Voices: Strategies to increase the participation of children and youth in gardening activities. Children, Youth, and Environments, 17, 517-526. http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/17_2/17_2_33_GreenerVoices.pdf.

Page 37: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

37

Linda M. Lobao Education Ph.D. North Carolina State University, Sociology (Minor: Political Science and History), 1986; M.A. University of South Florida, Sociology 1981; B.A. Boston University, Sociology. Areas of Specialization Rural poverty and development; the sociology of agriculture; spatial inequality (geographic distribution of inequality); political sociology Professional Positions 1997-present Professor, Rural Sociology, School of Environment and Natural Resources;

Professor, Department of Sociology; Professor, Department of Geography. The Ohio State University

2005-present Chair, Rural Sociology Graduate Program, The Ohio State University 1991-1997 Associate Professor, Rural Sociology, The Ohio State University 1986-1991 Assistant Professor, Rural Sociology, The Ohio State University 1986-present Graduate Faculty, Department of Women’s Studies, The Ohio State University 1999-present Faculty Affiliate, John Glenn Institute for Public Policy, The Ohio State University Select Honors and Awards Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2007 Excellence in Research Award, the Rural Sociological Society, 2004 President, the Rural Sociological Society, 2002-2003 Gamma Sigma Delta Award for Distinguished Research, The Ohio State University 2002 Distinguished Alumni Award, Department of Sociology, North Carolina State University, 2002 Research Lobao has published three books, noted below, over 50 peer reviewed journal articles, and an additional 60+chapters in edited books, reviews, and other articles. Her articles are in a variety of social science journals such as Social Forces, Social Science Quarterly, Rural Sociology, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Economic Development Quarterly, and Annual Review of Sociology. She has been lead principal investigator on 12 grants and co-investigator on 10 other funded projects, with research support from NSF, USDA, and various nonprofit organizations. Recent Selected Funded Research Projects, Lobao as Principal Investigator L. Lobao and D. Kraybill ARural County Governments, Economic Development, and Public

Services: The Impact of Decentralization Over Time.@ USDA 2007-2011, $144,000. L. Lobao, G. Coleman, M. Eastridge, P. Hemsworth, J. Sharp, and N. St-Pierre. “Farm Animal

Welfare in Ohio: Assessing Public Concern and Implications for the Food Animal Industry.” The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Interdisciplinary Team Research Competitive Grants Program, The Ohio State University 2006-2010, $99,180.

Page 38: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

38

Professional Service and Research Consulting In addition to serving as President of RSS, Lobao was elected Vice-President for 1997-1998. She was panel manager of the USDA-NRI Rural Development Panel for 1995 and a panel manager for the USDA Fund for Rural America. She has served on the editorial board of Rural Sociology, Demography, and Environment and Planning A and is presently a co-editor of a new journal, The Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy, and Society. Consulting includes: The Appalachian Regional Commission, projects on the development of socioeconomic distress indexes; The Center for Social Development, Washington University, Wealth Building in Rural America Project, funded by the National Rural Funders Collaborative and the F. B.Heron and W. K. Kellogg Foundation, 2005-2006; W. K. Kellogg Foundation, “Rural Americans, A Funding Transition for Policy Providers” Project, 2004-2005; National Association of Counties, on the changing role of county governments, 2001-present. Books Lobao, Linda, Gregory Hooks, and Ann Tickamyer (editors).2007. Spaces, Places and Inequality:

The Sociology of Spatial Inequality. Albany: The State University of New York Press. 2007 Lasley, Paul F. Larry Leistritz, and Linda M. Lobao Katherine Meyer. 1995. Beyond the Amber

Waves of Grain: An Examination of Economic and Social Restructuring in the Heartland . Boulder: Westview Press. 1995Lobao, Linda. Locality and Inequality: Farm and Industry Structure and Socioeconomic Conditions. 1990. Albany: The State University of New York Press. 1990

Select Recent Refereed Articles Gregory Hooks, Clayton Mosher, Shaun Genter, Thomas Rotolo and Linda Lobao. 2010.

Revisting the Impact of Prison Building on Job Growth: Education, Incarceration, and County-Level Employment, 1976-2004. Social Science Quarterly 91 (1): 228-244.

Linda Lobao and David Kraybill. 2009. “Poverty and Local Governments: Economic Development and Community Service Provision in an Era of Decentralization.” Growth and Change 40 (3):418-451.

Gregory Hooks and Linda Lobao. 2009. “Space and Politics” Pp. 367-384 in Kevin T. Leicht and J. Craig Jenkins (eds.) The Handbook of Politics: State and Civil Society in Global Perspective. Springer.

Linda Lobao, Gregory Hooks, and Ann Tickamyer. 2008.“Poverty and Inequality across Space” Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy, and Society 1 (April):89-113.

Linda Lobao and Curtis W. Stofferhan. 2008. “The Community Effects of Industrialized Farming: Social Science Research and Challenges to Corporate Farming Laws.” Agriculture and Human Values 25 (2):219-240.

Page 39: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

39

Brian H. Lower, Ph.D. Assistant Professor School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University 210 Kottman Hall, 2021 Coffey Road, Columbus, Ohio 43210 Tel: (614) 247-1676, Fax: (614) 292-7432, E-mail: [email protected] Professional Preparation

• Kent State University Zoology B.S. 1995 • Virginia Tech Biochemistry Ph.D. 2001 • Virginia Tech Biochemistry Postdoc. 2001-2002 • Virginia Tech Geosciences Postdoc 2002-2004

Appointments

• Assistant Professor The Ohio State University 2008-present • Senior Research Scientist Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 2004-2008 • Post Doctoral Associate Virginia Tech 2001-2004

Publications 1. Brian H. Lower and Steven K. Lower (2011, in press). “Force Spectroscopy of Mineral-

Microbe Bonds.” In Life at the Nanoscale: Atomic Force Microscopy of Live Cells. Edited by David Alsteens, Vincent Dupres, Claire Verbelen, Guillaume Andre, and Yves F. Dufrene. Singapore: Pan Stanford Publishing Pte Ltd.

2. Brian H. Lower (2010). “Antibody Recognition Force Microscopy (Ig-RFM) to Identify and Map the Nanoscale Distribution of Protein Molecules on the Surface of Live Microorganisms.” In Microscopy: Science, Technology, Applications and Education, p. 507-514. Edited by A. Mendez-Vilas and J. Diaz. Badajoz, Spain: Formatex Research Center.

3. Steven K. Lower, Ruchirej Yongsunthon, Alex C. DiBartola, Brian H. Lower, Andrew W. Buck, and Vance G. Fowler (2010). “A Tactile Response in Staphylococcus aureus,” Biophysical Journal 99:2803-2811.

4. Lijun Chen, Dennis A. Bazylinski, and Brian H. Lower (2010). “Bacteria that Synthesize Nano-Sized Compasses to Navigate using Earth’s Geomagnetic Field,” Nature Knowledge 1(10):14.

5. Lumarie Pérez-Guzmán, Kyle R. Bogner, and Brian H. Lower (2010). “Earth’s Ferrous Wheel,” Nature Knowledge 1(10):8.

6. Brian H. Lower, Ruchirej Yongsunthon, Liang Shi, Linda Wildling, Hermann J. Gruber, Catherine L. Reardon, Grigoriy E. Pinchuk, Nicholas S. Wigginton, Timothy C. Droubay, Jean-François Boily, and Steven K. Lower (2009). “Antibody-Recognition Force Microscopy shows that Outer Membrane Cytochromes OmcA and MtrC are Expressed on the Exterior Surface of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1,” Applied and Environmental Microbiology 75:2931-2935.

7. Saumyaditya Bose, Michael F. Hochella Jr., Yuri A. Gorby, David W. Kennedy, Dave E. McCready, Andrew Madden, and Brian H. Lower (2009). “Bioreduction of Hematite Nanoparticles by the Dissimilatory Iron Reducing Bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1,” Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 73:962-976.

8. Brian H. Lower, Roberto D. Lins, Zachery Oestreicher, Tjerk Straatsma, Michael F. Hochella Jr., Liang Shi, and Steven K. Lower (2008). In vitro Evolution of a Peptide with a Hematite Binding Motif that may Constitute a Natural Metal-Oxide Binding Archetype,” Environmental Science and Technology 42:3821-3827.

9. Carrick M. Eggleston, Janos Vörös, Liang Shi, Brian H. Lower, Timothy C. Droubay, Patricia

Page 40: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

40

J.S. Colberg. (2008). “Binding and Direct Electrochemistry of OmcA, an Outer-Membrane Cytochrome from Iron Reducing Bacteria, with Oxide Electrodes: A Candidate Microbial Fuel Cell System,” Inorganica Chimica Acta 361: 769-777.

10. Brian H. Lower, Liang Shi, Ruchirej Yongsunthon, Timothy C. Droubay, David E. McCready, and Steven K. Lower (2007). “Specific Bonds between an Iron Oxide Surface and Outer Membrane Cytochromes MtrC and OmcA from Shewanella oneidensis MR-1,” Journal of Bacteriology 189:4944-4952.

11. Ruchirej Yongsunthon, Vance Fowler, Jr., Brian H. Lower, F. Paul Vellano III, Emily Alexander, L. Barth Reller, G. Ralph Corey, Steven K. Lower (2007). “Correlation between Fundamental Binding Forces and Clinical Prognosis of Staphylococcus aureus Infections of Medical Implants,” Langmuir 23:2289-2292.

12. Nicholas S. Wigginton, Kevin M. Rosso, Brian H. Lower, Liang Shi, and Michael F. Hochella, Jr. (2007). “Electron Tunneling Properties of Outer-Membrane Decaheme Cytochromes from Shewanella oneidensis,” Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 71:543-555.

13. Yijia Xiong, Liang Shi, Baowei Chen, M. Uljana Mayer, Brian H. Lower, Yuri Londer, Saumyaditya Bose, Michael F. Hochella Jr., John M. Zachara, Jim K. Fredrickson, and Thomas C. Squier (2006). “High-affinity Binding and Direct Electron Transfer to Solid Metals by Purified Metal Reducing Protein OmcA Decaheme Cytochrome,” Journal of the American Chemical Society 128:13978-13979.

14. Liang Shi, Baowei Chen, Zheming Wang, Uljana Mayer-Cumblidge, Yuri A. Gorby, Shuisong Ni, Brian H. Lower, David W. Kennedy, David S. Wunschel, Heather M. Mottaz, Matthew J. Marshall, Alexander S. Beliaev, Eric A. Hill, Jim K. Fredrickson, John M. Zachara, and Thomas C. Squier (2006). “Isolation of High-Affinity Functional Protein Complex between OmcA and MtrC: Two Outer Membrane Decaheme c-type Cytochromes of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1,” Journal of Bacteriology 188:4705-4714.

15. Brian H. Lower, Michael F. Hochella Jr., and Steven K. Lower (2005). “Putative Mineral-Specific Proteins Synthesized by a Metal Reducing Bacterium,” American Journal of Science 305: 687-710.

16. Brian H. Lower, Ruchirej Yongsunthon, F. Paul Vellano, and Steven K. Lower (2005). “Simultaneous Force and Fluorescence Measurements of a Protein that Forms a Bond Between a Bacterium and a Solid Surface,” Journal of Bacteriology 187: 2127-2137.

17. Brian H. Lower, M. Ben Potters, and Peter J. Kennelly (2004). “A Phosphoprotein from the Archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus with Protein-Serine/Threonine Kinase Activity,” Journal of Bacteriology 186: 463-472.

18. Brian H. Lower and Peter J. Kennelly (2003). “Open Reading Frame sso2387 from the Archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus Encodes a Polypeptide with Protein-Serine Kinase Activity,” Journal of Bacteriology 185: 3436-3445.

19. Ben M. Potters, Barbara T. Solow, Kenneth M. Bischoff, David Graham, Brian H. Lower, and Peter J. Kennelly (2003). “Phosphoprotein with Phosphoglycerate Mutase Activity from the Archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus,” Journal of Bacteriology 185: 2112-2121.

20. Brian H. Lower and Peter J. Kennelly (2002). “The Membrane-Associated Protein-Serine/Threonine Kinase from Sulfolobus solfataricus is a Glycoprotein,” Journal of Bacteriology 184: 2614-2619.

21. Brian H. Lower, Kenneth M. Bischoff, and Peter J. Kennelly (2000). “The Archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus Contains a Membrane-Associated Protein Kinase Activity that Preferentially Phosphorylates Threonine Residues In Vitro,” Journal of Bacteriology 182: 3452-3459.

Page 41: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

41

Funding 1. Brian H. Lower (Lead-PI) and Dennis A. Bazylinski (2009-2012). Using Single-Molecule

Force and Fluorescence Microscopy to Elucidate the Molecular Mechanism of Bioinspired Magnetite Synthesis in Magnetotactic Bacteria. U.S. National Science Foundation. $404,000.

2. Tjerk P. Straatsma, Brian H. Lower (Co-PI) and David A. Dixon (2005-2008). Molecular Basis for Microbial Adhesion and Geochemical Surface Reactions. U.S. Department of Energy. $600,000.

Page 42: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

42

Stephen Nicholas Matthews School of Environment and Northern Research Station Natural Resources USDA Forest Service Ohio State University 359 Main Road 2021 Coffey Rd. Delaware, OH 43015 Columbus, OH 43210 [email protected] [email protected] Phone: (740) 368-0090 Phone: (614) 247-1889 Fax: (614) 292-7432 Education 2004-2008 Ph.D., Natural Resources, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 2000-2003 M.S., Wildlife Ecology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine 1993-1997 B.S., Wildlife Biology, Frostburg State University Frostburg, Maryland Professional Positions Research Assistant Professor, 2011-current, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio

State University & Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Ohio. Post Doctoral Researcher, 2008- 2010, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Ohio State

University & Northern Research Station USDA Forest Service, Ohio. Selected Peer-Reviewed Publications Matthews, S.N., Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.P., and Peters, M.P. 2011. Changes in potential habitat of

147 North American breeding bird species in response to redistribution of trees and climate following predicted climate change. Ecography In press. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06803.x.

Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., Matthews, S.N., and Peters, M. 2011. Lessons learned while integrating habitat, dispersal, disturbance, and life-history traits into species habitat models under climate change Ecosystems 14:1005-1020.

Matthews, S.N., Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., Peters, M.P., and Rodewald, P.G. 2011. Modifying climate change habitat models using tree species-specific assessments of model uncertainty and life history factors. Forest Ecology and Management 262:1460-1472.

Matthews, S.N. and Rodewald, P.G. 2010. Movement behaviour of a forest songbird in an urbanized landscape: the relative importance of patch-level effects and body condition during migratory stopover. Landscape Ecology 25: 955-965.

Rodenhouse, N.L., Matthews, S.N., McFarland, K.P., Lambert, J.D., Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., Sillett, T.S., and Homes, R.T. 2008. Potential effects of climate change on birds of the Northeast. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 13:517-540.

Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., Matthews, S.N., and Peters, M. 2008. Estimating potential habitat for 134 eastern US tree species under six climate scenarios. Forest Ecology and Management 254: 390-406.

Schwartz, M.W., Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., Matthews, S.N., and O’Connor, R.J. 2006. Predicting extinctions as a result of climate change. Ecology 87(7):1611-1615.

Matthews, S.N., O’Connor, R.J., and Plantinga, A. 2002. Quantifying the impacts on biodiversity of policies for carbon sequestration in forests. Ecological Economics 40:71-87.

Page 43: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

43

Research Presentations (Five selected presentations since 2009) Matthews, S., L. R. Iverson, A M. Prasad, M.P. Peters, R. Neilson and R. Drapek. 2011. Comparing

plant functional type and individual species distribution models under climate change: results for eastern US trees. US- International Association for Landscape Ecology 26th Annual Symposium, Portland, OR.

Matthews, S., L. R. Iverson, A M. Prasad, and M.P. Peters. 2011. Long-term impacts associated with climate variability. Bottomland Ecosystem Restoration: Bridging Science and Management 2011 Conference. Collinsville, IL. (Invited)

Matthews S.N., Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., and Peters, M.P. 2010. Extending species models with a management focus in northern Wisconsin. Ecological Society of America 95th Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, PA. (Invited)

Matthews, S.N., Iverson, L.R., Prasad, A.M., and Peters, M. 2010. Translating potential habitat changes in tree species to climate change based on model dissection and species characteristic responses to disturbance and biological factors. US- International Association for Landscape Ecology 25th Annual Symposium, Athens, GA.

Matthews, S.N. 2009. Climate change in eastern forests: using climate models and species attributes to quantify potential changes. Biological Sciences Seminar Series, Wright State University. Dayton, OH. November 2009. (Invited)

Teaching Experience ENR-623: Principles of Wildlife Ecology and Management, Instructor of Record, Autumn 2011.

Ohio State University, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Columbus, Ohio. ENR-319: Introduction to Forestry, Fisheries, and Wildlife, Instructor of Record, Spring 2011.

Ohio State University, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Columbus, Ohio. ENR-899: Ecology and Evolution of Bird Migration, Co-Instructor, 2010 Winter. Ohio State

University, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Columbus, Ohio. Grants Awarded as Principal Investigator Climate change induced biome shifts and implications for contaminant management. Army Corps

of Engineers, FY 2011 $46,603. Response of salamander to forest management practices in Ohio's southeastern oak-hickory forest.

Ohio Division of Wildlife, FY 2011 $24,785. Ohio biodiversity conservation partnership - response of salamanders to forest management

practices. Ohio Division of Wildlife, FY 2011 $26,460. Forest focus area songbird monitoring survey. Ohio Division of Wildlife, FY 2011 $40,129. Synergistic Activities 2011 Climate Change Atlas Workshop, USDA Forest Service and Cornell University, 3 webinar

workshops over two days reaching 195 participants, Co-Presenter and Facilitator. 2009 Session moderator, “Global Change Biology” 94th Ecological Society of America Annual

Meeting, Albuquerque, New Mexico. 2008 R Statistical Package 2 day Workshop, Co-Leader, Ohio State University. Manuscript reviewer for over 10 journals including; Biological Conservation, Journal of

Biogeography, and Global Change Biology. Member of Ecological Society of America and International Association for Landscape Ecology.

Page 44: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

44

Thomas Eric McConnell Assistant Professor and Forest Products Extension Specialist 2021 Coffey Road, 210 Kottman Hall Columbus, OH 43210 Phone: (614) 292-9838 E-mail: [email protected] Education Mississippi State University

Ph.D. in Forest Resources Mississippi State University

M.S. in Forest Products, Minor Statistics Louisiana Tech University

B.S. in Forest Management, Magna Cum Laude Experience Academic The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

Assistant Professor and Extension Specialist, Forest Operations & Products, January 2011 to present Appointment: 75% Extension, 15% Research, 10% Teaching

Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS Graduate Research Assistant, July 2006 to December 2010

Industrial Cooper Tire and Rubber, Texarkana, AR

Quality Assurance Technician, January 1999 to May 2006 Louisiana-Pacific, Carthage, TX

Quality Manufacturing Technician, July 1997 to August 1998 Professional Memberships and Service • Forest Products Society; Co-chair, Furniture & Hardwood Veneer/Plywood Technical Interest

Group, Forest Products Society 2010-present • Society of Wood Science and Technology; Member, Society of Wood Science and Technology

Visiting Scientists Committee 2011-present • American Wood Protection Association • Society of American Foresters • Ohio Forestry Association; Board Member 2011-present • Ohio Valley Lumber Drying Association; Board Member 2011-present • Ohio Tree Farm Committee • Ohio Woodland Stewards 2011-present • Technical Session Moderator, Furniture & Hardwood Veneer/Plywood Technical Interest

Group, Forest Products Society 65th International Convention. Portland, OR. • Reviewer, Bioresources (1); Forest Products Journal (1)

Page 45: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

45

Publications McConnell, T.E. and R. Shmulsky. 2009. The effects of hurricane Katrina on the structure,

performance, capacity, and future of the lumber industry in the United States gulf states. J. Forest Prod. Bus. Res. 6(2009).

McConnell, E. and R. Shmulsky. 2009. Hurricane Katrina’s effects on Mississippi’s lumber manufacturers. Forest and Wildlife Research Center, Mississippi State University, Research Advances 12(4):4 p.

McConnell, T.E., S.Q. Shi, and R. Shmulsky. 2009. A preliminary study on the bending stiffness of chemically treated wood material for structural composite lumber. Wood Fiber Sci. 41(3):322-324.

McConnell, T.E., N.S. Little, S.Q. Shi, and T.P. Schultz. 2010. The susceptibility of chemically treated southern hardwoods to subterranean termite attack. Wood Fiber Sci. 42(2):252-254.

McConnell, T.E. and S.Q. Shi. 2010. Effects of a partial hydrolysis on the modulus and mass loss of three southern hardwoods. Forest Prod. J. 60(7/8):654-658.

McConnell, T.E., W.B. Stuart, and L.A. Grace. 2011. Learning through service: Wood in design and engineering. Forest Prod. J. 61(1):14-19.

McConnell, T.E. and S.Q. Shi. 2011. Surface energy characterization of three partially hydrolyzed southern hardwood species determined by dynamic contact angle analysis. J. Adhesion 87(4):353-365.

McConnell, T.E. and S.Q. Shi. 2011. Partially hydrolyzing southern hardwoods: Possibilities for biofuels and wood composite manufacturing. Forest Prod. J. 61(3), in press.

Little, N.S., T.E. McConnell, N.E. Irby, J.R. Riggins, and S.Q. Shi. 2011. Wettability of southern pine subjected to bark beetle blue-stain fungal associates. Proceedings of the Particleboard, Fiberboard, and Molded Products Technical Interest Group, Forest Products Society 65th International Convention, Portland, OR.

McConnell, T.E. and N.E. Irby. 2011. Preservative-treated wood: A sustainable consumer choice. The Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet F-71-11. 2 p.

Irby, N.E. and T.E. McConnell. 2011. Managing hardwood log merchandise. Timber Processing 36(5)32-34.

Irby, N.E. and T.E. McConnell. 2011. Best dry end quality practices. Timber Processing 36(6)20-21.

Irby, N.E. and T.E. McConnell. 2011. Managing your lumberyard. Timber Processing, in press. Teaching ENR 432, Sustainable Forest Products

• Spring Quarter, 2011: 19 students o Student Evaluation of Instruction scores exceeded the average score of the School,

College, and University

Page 46: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

46

Edward L. McCoy School of Environment and Natural Resources Ohio State University/OARDC 1680 Madison Ave. Wooster, Ohio 44691 (330) 263-3884 [email protected] Education Ph.D. 1984. Oregon State University. Soil Physics. M.S. 1979. Oregon State University. Soil Microbiology. B.S. 1974. Iowa State University. Plant Pathology. Professional Experience 1991-present Associate Professor of Soil Physics, Ohio State University. 1985-1991 Assistant Professor of Soil Physics, Ohio State University. 1984-1985 Post-Doctoral Associate in Soil Science, Oregon State University. 1976-1984 Research Assistant in Soil Science, Oregon State University. Recent Refereed Manuscripts (total of 50) Allred, B.J., J.D. Redman, E.L. McCoy and R.S. Taylor. 2005. Golf course applications of near-

surface geophysical methods: A case study. Journal of Environmental & Engineering Geophysics 10(1):1-19.

Clivati Mcintyre, A. and E.L. McCoy. 2006. Fractional Brownian description of aggregate surfaces within undisturbed soil samples using penetration resistance measurements. Soil & Tillage Research 88:144-152.

McCoy, E.L., P. Kunkel, G.W. Prettyman and K.R. McCoy. 2007. Root zone composition effects on putting green soil water. Online. Appl. Turfgrass Sci. doi:10.1094/ATS-2007-1119-02-RS.

McCoy, E.L. and K.R. McCoy. 2009. Simulation of putting-green soil water dynamics: Implications for turfgrass water use. Agric. Water Manage. 96:405-414.

Yang, H., D.C. Florence, E.L. McCoy, W.A. Dick and P.S. Grewal. 2009. Design and hydraulic characteristics of a field-scale bi-phasic bioretention rain garden system for storm water management. Water Sci. & Tech. 59.9:1863-1872.

Yang, H., E.L. McCoy, P.S. Grewal and W.A. Dick. 2010. Dissolved nutrients and atrazine removal by column-scale monophasic and biphasic rain garden model systems. Chemosphere 80:929-934.

Munoz, M.P., J.R. Street, D.S. Garder, E.L. McCoy, C.H. Darrah and P.J. Sherrat. 2010. Influence of compost topdressing on turfgrass quality and playability on establish soil-based athletic turf. 2nd European Turfgrass Society Journal. pp 145-147.

Recent Book Chapters, Technical Reports & Symposium Proceedings McCoy, E.L. and K.R. McCoy. 2005. Putting green rootzone amendments and irrigation water

conservation. USGA Turfgrass & Environmental Research Online 4(8):1-9. McCoy, E. L. and K.R. McCoy. 2006. Dynamics of water flow in putting greens via computer

simulation. USGA Turfgrass and Environmental Research Online 5(17):1-15.

Page 47: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

47

Allred, B.J., E.L. McCoy and J.D. Redman. 2008. Ground-penetrating radar investigation of a golf course green: Computer processing and field survey set-up considerations. pp. 353-362. In: B.J. Allred et al. (eds), Handbook of Agricultrual Geophysics. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL.

McCoy, E.L. 2008. Soil water in managed turfgrass landscapes. pp. 91-106. In: J.B. Beard and M.P. Kenna (eds.) Water Quality and Quantity Issues for Turfgrasses in Urban Landscapes, CAST Special Publication 27, Council for Agricultural Science and Technology, Ames, IA.

Patents McCoy, E.L. 1993. Method and apparatus for hydrologic regulation of sports turf soil profiles. U.S.

Patent Office No. 5,219,243. 15 June, 1993. Grewal, P.S., E.L. McCoy, W.A. Dick and H. Yang. 2011. Bi-phasic bioretention system. U.S.

Patent Office No. 7,967,979. 28 June, 2011. Current Teaching at OSU Introductory Soil Science Urban and Sports Turf Soils Computer Simulation of Soil Chemical, Physical and Biological Processes

Page 48: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

48

William J. Mitsch, Ph.D. Distinguished Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources and Director Wilman H. Schiermeier Olentangy River Wetland Research Park, The Ohio State University 352 W. Dodridge Street, Columbus, OH 43202 Phone: office: (614) 292 – 9774 e-mail: [email protected]

Employment History 1986 – present The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio Professor of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, 1986-present Director, Olentangy River Wetland Research Park, 1993-present Professor of Environmental Biology/Science, 1986-present Professor of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology (EEOB), 1999-present Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 1989-present 1979 – 1985 University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky Professor, 1984-1985; Associate Professor, 1981-1984; Assistant Professor, 1979-1980, Energy and Ecological Systems Program, Systems Science Institute 1975 – 1979 Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois Assistant Professor, Pritzker Department of Environmental Engineering Education Ph.D. 1975 Systems Ecology, Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida M.E. 1972 Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida B.S. 1969 Engineering, University of Notre Dame Significant International Activities United Nations Environmental Programme and Nature Iraq EARTH University, Costa Rica Centro Internacional de Altos Estudios Agronomicos Mediterraneos), Zaragoza, Spain SCOPE (Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment), Paris, France MISTRA (Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research), Stockholm, Sweden IPPC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) INTECOL (The International Association of Ecology) Chinese Academy of Sciences and various universities, China Harry Oppenheimer Okavango Research Centre, Maun, Botswana-Fulbright Specialist Royal Danish School of Pharmacy, Copenhagen, Denmark- Fulbright Fellow Significant Federal Activities U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC Science Advisory Board, 2001-07 National Research Council —4 Committees, National Academy of Science U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, National Technical Review Committee, New Orleans U.S. Congress oral and written testimony on wetlands NOAA, Washington, DC Chair, Committee on Scientific Solutions to Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Selected Journal Editorial Boards 1991-present Ecological Engineering editor-in-chief 2006-2008 Wetlands 2000-present Ecological Indicators 1983-present Ecological Modelling 1992-2004 Wetlands Ecology and Management 1988-present Ecological Economics

Page 49: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

49

Selected Awards and Honors 2011 Concurrent Professorship, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, China 2010 Honorary Degree, Tartu University, Tartu, Estonia 2010 Einstein Professorship, Chinese Academy of Sciences 2007 Lifetime Achievement Award, Society of Wetland Scientists 2005 Theodore M. Sperry Award, Society for Ecological Restoration International 2004 Stockholm Water Prize, Stockholm, Sweden 1998 Odum Lecturer - University of Georgia 1998 Distinguished Scholar, The Ohio State University 1996 AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science) Fellow 1996 National Wetlands Award--Research, U.S. EPA and Environmental Law Institute Funded Research Grants, Contracts and other Support The Ohio State University (1986-present) > $11,000,000 University of Louisville (1979-1985) $125,000 Illinois Institute of Technology (1975-1979) $82,000 Graduate Teaching Graduate Student/Post-Doc Advising: 67 Graduate Students advised through completion (48 Master’s and 19 Ph.D. students, all with thesis or dissertation) and 10 Post-docs completed

Selected Publications Books (from 16) Mitsch, W.J., J.G. Gosselink, C.J. Anderson, and L. Zhang. 2009. Wetland Ecosystems. John Wiley

& Sons, Inc., New York. Mitsch, W.J. and J.G. Gosselink. 2007. Wetlands, 4th ed. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 582

pp. Mitsch, W.J. and S.E. Jørgensen. 2004. Ecological Engineering and Ecosystem Restoration. John

Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York. 411 pp. Papers (from 220) Mitsch, W.J, L. Zhang, K. C. Stefanik, A. M. Nahlik, C. J. Anderson, B. Bernal, M. Hernandez, and

K. Song. 2011. Creating wetlands: Primary succession, water quality changes, and self-design over 15 years. BioScience in press

Nahlik, A.M. and W.J. Mitsch. 2011. Methane emissions from tropical freshwater wetlands located in different climatic zones of Costa Rica. Global Change Biology 17: 1321-1334.

Mitsch, W.J. 2010. The 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill: What would Mother Nature do? Ecological Engineering 36: 1607-1610.

Song, K., S.H. Lee, W.J. Mitsch, and H. Kang. 2010. Different responses of denitrification rates and denitrifying bacterial communities to hydrologic pulsing in created wetlands. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 42: 1721-1727.

Mitsch, W.J., A.M. Nahlik, P. Wolski, B. Bernal, L. Zhang, and L. Ramberg. 2010. Tropical wetlands: Seasonal hydrologic pulsing, carbon sequestration, and methane emissions. Wetlands Ecology and Management 18: 573-586.

Day, J.W., Jr., C.A.S. Hall, A. Yáñez-Arancibia, D. Pimentel, C. Ibañez Marti, and W. J. Mitsch. 2009. Ecology in times of scarcity. BioScience 59: 321-331.

Page 50: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

50

Mitsch, W.J., J, Lu, X. Yuan, W. He, and L. Zhang. 2008. Optimizing ecosystem services in China.

Science 322: 528. Day J.W., Jr., D. F. Boesch, E. J. Clairain, G. P. Kemp, S. B. Laska, W. J. Mitsch, K. Orth, H.

Mashriqui, D. R. Reed, L. Shabman, C. A. Simenstad, B. J. Streever, R. R. Twilley, C. C. Watson, J. T. Wells, and D. F. Whigham.. 2007. Restoration of the Mississippi Delta: Lessons From Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Science 315: 1679-1684.

Costanza, R., W.J. Mitsch, and J.W. Day. 2006. A new vision for New Orleans and the Mississippi delta: applying ecological economics and ecological engineering. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 4: 465-472.

Mitsch, William J., John W. Day, Jr., J. Wendell Gilliam, Peter M. Groffman, Donald L. Hey, Gyles W. Randall, and Naiming Wang. 2001. Reducing nitrogen loading to the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi River Basin: Strategies to counter a persistent ecological problem. BioScience 51: 373-388.

Page 51: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

51

Cathy A. Rakowski Associate Professor

• Faculty at The Ohio State University (1990-present) currently with joint appointment in the

School of Environment and Natural Resources (RS/ESS/ESGP) and Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies; adjunct appointment in Social Work; core faculty in Latin American Studies Program

• Ph.D. in Sociology (University of Texas at Austin 1984); MA in Latin American Studies (University of Texas at Austin 1977); BA in Social Anthropology (University of Michigan 1973)

• Field work experience and consulting in Venezuela, India, Mexico, Uganda, Senegal • Formerly Visiting Assistant Professor at Michigan State University (1986-1990), University of

Toledo (1987), University of Michigan (1987); also taught at Simón Bolívar University (1983), Central University of Venezuela (1984); and Visiting Research at the University of Guayana (Venezuela, 1997-1998)

Research Emphasis Processes of social change, including development planning and implementation; social impact

assessment; program design and evaluation; analysis of macro-micro links in social change and of links between processes of globalization and local level change; processes of political and administrative decentralization; public policy making; gender mainstreaming in development plans, policies and projects; rural development

Social inequality/injustice, including issues of poverty; food security; land and water rights; gender, class, and ethnic justice; access to productive resources such as credit and land; migration; employment; violence; human rights

Grassroots struggles for rights, including citizen and economic rights Violence against Women in the U.S. and Latin America Applied experience with social planning and policy making, social impact assessment, program

evaluation, labor analysis in Venezuela (1979-1986) and occasional short-term consulting since 1989

Have consulted for the United Nations Development Program, UBS Optimus Foundation, Inter-American Foundation, Cordiplán-Venezuela (national planning agency), Corporación Venezolana de Guayana-CVG (regional development corporation), CVG-Proforca (forestry consortium), Fundacite-Guayana (educational research foundation), U.S. Department of Commerce

Courses Taught Regularly at The Ohio State University • RS 892 Development & Social Change (Graduate) (theories and policy making in international

development post WW II) • RS 888 Social Action in Community Development (G) (domestic community development and

change in rural communities, conflict, approaches, sources of change, resource-based change) • RS 378 Social Groups in Developing Societies (Undergraduate) (understanding people in other

cultures and their efforts to improve their lives; focus on food security, struggles over water and land, capacity building, farmer-to-farmer programs, grassroots initiatives)

• WS 505 Feminist Analysis in Global Perspective (U) (understanding women’s perspectives and experiences in other cultures)

Page 52: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

52

• WS 780 Global/Transnational Feminisms (G) (local women’s movements and involvement in global rights campaigns)

• WS 750 Feminists Interrogate Violence (G) (debates surrounding gendered and sexual violence) • WS 624 Women and Social Change in Latin America (G+U) (women organizing for change in

Latin America—economic, political, human rights based, environmental, etc.) Selected Research Funding Sources Domestic Research: Seed Grant from The Criminal Justice Research Center, Ohio State, 2007-2009 Rural Sociological Society-Kellogg Foundation Diversity Initiative Grant, 1996-1999 International: Fulbright Scholar Award National Science Foundation, Sociology Program Howard Heinz Endowment for Research in Latin America FUNDACITE-Guayana (Venezuelan research foundation) Corporación Venezolana de Guayana and its subsidiary, CVG-Proforca (funding and logistical

support) Selected Honors 2006 Rural Sociological Society, Excellence in Instruction Award (national) 2006 Gamma Sigma Delta Teaching Award of Merit, College of Food, Agricultural and

Environmental Sciences 2003 Rodney Plimpton Outstanding Teaching Award. College of FAES 2002 Ohio State University, Office of International Education International Faculty Award 2001 Gamma Sigma Delta International Award of Merit Recent Publications and Presentations Authored or co-authored 22 journal articles, 12 book chapters, 4 edited volumes, 10 reviews, over 30 professional reports, and over 40 papers presented at professional meetings. Most recent works: “Advancing Women’s Rights Inside and Outside the Bolivarian Revolution: 1998-2010.” In

Thomas Ponniah and Jonathan Eastwood, eds. The Revolution in Venezuela: Social and Political Change under Chávez. Harvard University Press, 2011, pp. 155-192. Cathy A. Rakowski and Gioconda Espina.

“Women’s Struggles for Rights in Venezuela: Opportunities and Challenges.” In Elizabeth Meier and Nathalie Lebon, eds. Women’s Activism in Latin America and the Caribbean: Engendering Social Justice, Democratizing Citizenship. Rutgers University Press, 2010, pp. 255-272. Cathy A. Rakowski and Gioconda Espina.

“Waking Women Up? Chávez, Populism and Venezuela’s ‘Popular’ Women.” In Karen Kampwirth, ed. Gender and Populism in Latin America: Passionate Politics. Penn State University Press, 2010, pp. 180-201. Gioconda Espina and Cathy A. Rakowski.

“The Rise of Anti-Development in Venezuela’s Planned Industrial City.” Paper to be presented at the Rethinking Development Conference, Cornell University, November 10-12, 2011.

“Domesticating Public Administration in Ciudad Guayana, Venezuela.” Paper presented at the LASA2009 Congress (Latin American Studies Association), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 11-15, 2009.

Page 53: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

53

“The Macho City: Lessons from Ciudad Guayana.” Paper presented at the University of Florida

International Conference on Urban Divides in Latin America, January 28-30, 2009. Currently Working on Book and articles: Domesticating the Macho City: Gender, Public Administration, and Social

Programs in Venezuela’s Planned, Industrial City. Research: A Multi-Stage Interdisciplinary Assessment of Battered Women’s Service Needs and

Agency Programming: Collaborative Research Involving CHOICES and The Ohio State University. Theresa J. Early (Social Work), Linda A. Bernhard (Nursing), and Cathy A. Rakowski. Since 2008. Analysis underway.

Research: Pines, Planning, and People: A Longitudinal Study of Social Change in a Region of Forestry and Petroleum Development. Preparing to resume research on this project from 1989-1996.

Advisees Currently advise 4 PhD students (1 RS, 1 ESGP, 2 WGSS), 4 Masters students (2 RS, 1 WGSS, 1

LAS), 1 senior honors student (ENR). Recently graduated advisees: 2 MS students (RS), 1 PhD (WGSS).

Page 54: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

54

Amanda Dumin Rodewald School of Environment and Natural Resources Phone: (614) 247-6099 The Ohio State University Fax: (614) 292-7432 2021 Coffey Road E-mail: [email protected] Columbus, Ohio 43210-1085 Position Professor of Wildlife Ecology, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University. October 2010 to present. (Associate Professor 2006-2010; Assistant Professor 2000-2006).

Education Ph.D. in Ecology, 2000. Pennsylvania State University; M.S. in Zoology, 1995. University of Arkansas; B.S. in Wildlife Biology, 1992. University of Montana.

Recent Recognition Academic Leadership Program Fellow, CIC Institutions, 2010-2011. Fellow, American Ornithologists’ Union, 2011; Elective Member, 2006 Distinguished Junior Faculty Research Award, Ohio Agricultural Research & Development Center, OSU,

2007 Finalist for Magrath & Kellogg Foundation Engagement Award for The Sugar Creek Project, OSU,

2007 Fellow, President’s and Provost’s Leadership Institute, OSU, 2006-2008 Price Academic Advising Award, College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences,

OSU, 2004 Recent Professional Service Chartered Science Advisory Board (SAB) of US Environmental Protection Agency, 2009 – present; National Academies / National Research Council’s Committee on Human and Environmental Exposure Science in the 21st Century, 2010-2013; Report on the Environment Review Panel of SAB, US Environmental Protection Agency, 2009 to present; Ecological Processes and Effects Committee of SAB, US Environmental Protection Agency, 2006 to present; Review Panel for National Science Foundation, Ecology Program, 2007, 2009; Editorial Board, Studies in Avian Biology (2010 to present), International Journal of Forestry (2008-2011), The Auk (2006-2010), Journal of Wildlife Management (2004-2006); Council Member of The American Ornithologists’ Union, 2008 to present. Representative Academic Service Steering Committee of OSU University Senate (2009-2011), University Senate (2009 to present), Advisory board for Climate, Water, Carbon Program at OSU (2008 to present), Science Advisory Committee to Environmental Science Program Council, OSU (2010 to present), Advisory Committee for the Director of the Ohio Sea Grant College Program, Stone Laboratory, the Center for Lake Erie Area Research (CLEAR), and the Great Lakes Aquatic Ecosystem Research Consortium (GLAERC) (2010 to present), ENR Graduate Studies Committee (2001-2011).

Page 55: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

55

Selected Publications (total = 62 journal articles, 3 book chapters since 2000) Rodewald, A. D. In press. Spreading messages about invasives. Diversity and Distributions. Rodewald, A. D. In press. Evaluating factors that guide avian community response to urbanization.

Studies in Avian Biology. Bakermans, M.H., A.D. Rodewald, A.C. Vitz, and C. Rengifo. In press. Migratory bird use of

shade coffee: the role of structural and floristic features. Agroforestry Systems. Rodewald, A. D., D. P. Shustack, and T. M. Jones. 2011. Dynamic selective environments and

evolutionary traps in human-dominated landscapes. Ecology 92:1781-1788. Shustack, D.P. and A.D. Rodewald. 2011. Nest predation reduces benefit to early clutch initiation

in an urbanizing landscape. Journal of Avian Biology 42:204-209. Rodewald, A. D., L. J. Kearns, and D. P. Shustack. 2011. Anthropogenic resources decouple

predator-prey relationships. Ecological Applications 21:936-943. Newell, F. L. and A. D. Rodewald. 2011. Role of topography, canopy structure, and floristics in

nest-site selection and nesting success of canopy songbirds. Forest Ecology and Management 262:739-749.

Shustack, D. P. and A. D. Rodewald. 2010. A method for detecting undervalued resources with application to breeding birds. Ecological Applications 20:2047-2057.

Shustack, D. P. and A. D. Rodewald. 2010. Attenuated nesting season of the Acadian flycatcher (Empidonax virescens) in urban forests. The Auk 127:421-420.

Vitz, A. C. and A. D. Rodewald. 2010. Fledgling songbird movements within and beyond the natal home range. The Auk 127:364-371.

Smith-Castro, J.R. and A.D. Rodewald. 2010. Effects of recreational trails on breeding birds in forested urban parks. Natural Areas Journal 30:500-509.

Rodewald, A. D., D. P. Shustack, and L. E. Hitchcock. 2010. Exotic shrubs as ephemeral ecological traps for nesting birds. Biological Invasions 12:33-39.

Bakermans, M., A. Vitz, A. D Rodewald, and C. Rengifo. 2009. Migratory songbird use of shade coffee in the Venezuelan Andes with implications for conservation of cerulean warbler. Biological Conservation 142:2476-83.

Lehnen, S. E. and A. D. Rodewald. 2009. Investigating area-sensitivity in shrubland birds: responses to a patchy landscape. Forest Ecology and Management 257:2308-2316.

Bakermans, M. H. and A. D Rodewald. 2009. Think globally, manage locally: the importance of steady state forest features for a declining songbird. Forest Ecology and Management 258:224-232.

Sundell-Turner, N. and A.D. Rodewald. 2008. A comparison of landscape-based methods for conservation planning. Landscape and Urban Planning 86:219-225.

Rodewald, A. D. and D. P. Shustack. 2008. Consumer resource-matching in urbanizing landscapes: are synanthropic species over-matching? Ecology.89: 515-521.

Rodewald, A. D. and D. P. Shustack. 2008. Urban flight: understanding individual and population-level responses of Nearctic-Neotropical migratory birds to urbanization. Journal of Animal Ecology 77:83-91.

Vitz, A. C. and A. D. Rodewald. 2007. Vegetative and fruit resources as determinants of habitat use by mature-forest birds during the post-breeding period. Auk 124:494-507.

Leston, L. F. V. and A. D. Rodewald. 2006. Are urban forests ecological traps for understory birds? An examination using Northern Cardinals. Biological Conservation 131:566-574.

Rodewald, A. D. and M. H. Bakermans. 2006. What is the appropriate paradigm for riparian forest conservation? Biological Conservation 128:193-200.

Page 56: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

56

Vitz, A. C. and A. D. Rodewald. 2006. Can regenerating clearcuts benefit mature-forest birds? An

examination of post-breeding ecology. Biological Conservation 127: 477-486 Rodewald, A. D. and A. C. Vitz. 2005. Edge and area-sensitivity of shrubland birds. Journal of

Wildlife Management 69:681-688. Borgmann, K. L. and A. D. Rodewald. 2005. Forest restoration in urbanizing landscapes:

interactions between land uses and an exotic shrub. Restoration Ecology 13:334-340. Borgmann, K. L. and A. D. Rodewald. 2004. Nest predation in urbanizing landscapes: the role of

exotic shrubs. Ecological Applications 14: 1757–1765. Rodewald, A. D. 2002. Nest predation in forested regions: landscape and edge effects. Journal of

Wildlife Management 66:634-640. Rodewald, A. D. and R. H. Yahner. 2001. Influence of landscape composition on avian

community structure and associated mechanisms. Ecology 82: 3493-3504. Research Funding (>$5 million since 2000) National Science Foundation, US Fish and Wildlife Service, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, National Council on Air and Stream Improvement, Ohio Division of Wildlife, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, American Association for the Advancement of Science, The Nature Conservancy, Ohio Ornithological Society, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo Teaching Undergraduate: Principles of Wildlife Ecology and Management, Introduction to Forestry,

Fisheries, and Wildlife, Research in Avian Ecology, Ecology and Conservation of Birds, Introduction to the Study of Birds (at OSU Stone Laboratory), Ornithology (Penn State).

Graduate: Managing Wildlife Metapopulations, Readings in Landscape Ecology, Drafting a conservation blueprint: approaches for regional conservation planning, Advanced Wildlife Ecology, Graduate Research Symposium, Research in Natural Resources.

Graduate Student Advising

Completed: 5 PhD and 12 MS students since 2002. Current: 4 PhD, 3 MS, 1 MENR students

Page 57: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

57

Paul G. Rodewald Education Ph.D., Ecology Pennsylvania State University 2001 M.S., Zoology University of Arkansas 1995 B.S., Natural Resource Management Rutgers University 1986 Professional Positions Associate Professor, Wildlife Ecology The Ohio State University 2010–present Assistant Professor, Wildlife Ecology The Ohio State University 2003–2010 Peer-Reviewed Publications (since 2000) Matthews, S. N., L. R. Iverson, A. M. Prasad, M. P. Peters, and P. G. Rodewald. 2011. Modifying

climate change habitat models using tree species-specific assessments of model uncertainty and life history-factors. Forest Ecology and Management 262:1460-1472.

MacDade, L. M., P. G. Rodewald, and K. A. Hatch. 2011. Contribution of emergent aquatic insects to diet and refueling performance in spring migrant songbirds. Auk 128:127-137.

DeGroote, L. W., and P. G. Rodewald. 2010. Blood parasites in migrating wood-warblers: effects on refueling, energetic condition, and migration timing. Journal of Avian Biology 41:1-7.

Matthews, S. N., and P. G. Rodewald. 2010. Movement behaviour of a forest songbird in an urbanized landscape: the relative importance of patch-level effect and body condition during migratory stopover. Landscape Ecology 25:955-965.

Boone, A. B., and P. G. Rodewald. 2010. Neotropical winter habitat of the Magnolia Warbler: effects on molt, energetic condition, migration timing, and hematozoan infection during spring migration. Condor 112:115-122.

Matthews, S. N., and P. G. Rodewald. 2010. Urban forest patches and stopover duration of migratory Swainson’s Thrushes. Condor 112:96-104.

DeGroote, L. W., and P. G. Rodewald. 2008. An improved method for quantifying hematozoa by digital microscopy. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 44:446-450.

Rodewald, P. G., and Brittingham, M. C. 2007. Stopover habitat use by spring migrant landbirds: the roles of habitat structure, leaf development, and food availability. Auk 124:1063-1074.

Rodewald, P. G., and Matthews, S. N. 2005. Landbird use of riparian and upland forest stopover habitats in an urban landscape. Condor 107:259-268.

Rodewald, P. G., M. J. Santiago, and A. D. Rodewald. 2005. The role of midwestern golf courses in the conservation of Red-headed Woodpeckers. Wildlife Society Bulletin 33:448-453.

Rodewald, P. G., and Brittingham, M. C. 2004. Stopover habitats of landbirds during fall: use of edge-dominated and early successional forests. Auk 121:1040-1055.

Rodewald, A. D., and Rodewald, P. G. 2003. Mixed-species bird flocks in high-elevation forest habitats of northern Ecuador. Cotinga 19:51-54.

Rodewald, P. G., and M. C. Brittingham. 2002. Habitat use and behavior of mixed-species songbird flocks during fall migration. Wilson Bulletin 114:87-98.

Suthers, H. B., J. M. Bickal, and P. G. Rodewald. 2000. Use of successional habitat and fruit resources by songbirds during autumn migration in central New Jersey. Wilson Bulletin 112:249-260.

Page 58: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

58

Selected Technical Reports Rodewald, P. G., and D. N. Ewert. 2008. Managing habitats for migratory birds in the western

Lake Erie basin. Booklet produced by The Nature Conservancy. 18 pp. Ewert, D. N., G. J. Soulliere, R. D. Macleod, M. C. Shieldcastle, P. G. Rodewald, E. Fujimura, J.

Shieldcastle, and R. J. Gates. 2005. Migratory bird stopover site attributes in the western Lake Erie basin. Report produced by The Nature Conservancy. 40 pp.

Grants (as Principal Investigator)

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2011-12. Local- and landscape-scale forest habitat attributes and abundance of stopover migrant land birds: addressing short term information needs to lower risk of wind turbines to migratory birds. $10.233.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 2011-12. Ohio Breeding Bird Atlas II (2006-2011): Completion of abundance surveys in the final field season. $14,800.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2005-2012. Second Ohio Breeding Bird Atlas. $737,700. ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2011-12. Support for new field initiatives in Ohio Breeding Bird Atlas

II. $38,422. The Nature Conservancy. 2009-11. Use of riparian forest restorations by fall migrant landbirds in

northwestern Ohio. $56,377. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture-Forest Service. 2008-10. A decision-support tool to aid in planning and

decisions pertaining to climate change. $119,800. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 2008-10. Combining NEXRAD, radio telemetry, LANDSAT, and

ground technologies to evaluate landbird migration and identify stopover locations along the upper Mississippi River system. $65,250.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2007-10. Statewide surveys for wetland birds with emphasis on King Rail and Black Tern. $64,742.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2007-09. Importance of emergent aquatic insects for spring migrant landbirds in Ohio’s Western Lake Erie Basin. $35,758.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2006-07. Movements, habitat selection, and stopover duration of migrating landbirds in a fragmented forest area near Lake Erie in Ohio. $65,300.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2006-07. Avian influenza surveillance. $19,000. Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Ohio State University (Research

Enhancement Competitive Seed Grant). 2005-09. Using stable-isotope analysis to link seasonal events migratory landbirds. $50,000.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2005-08. Suitability of forest habitats for migrating landbirds along an urban to rural landscape gradient. $167,785.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes Region Joint Venture. 2004-06. Forest habitats near Lake Erie in Ohio: defining quality stopover sites for migrating landbirds. $13,214.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bird Habitat Division. 2004-05. Forest habitats in fragmented landscapes near Lake Erie: defining quality stopover sites for migrating landbirds. $22,070.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2003-06. Forest habitats in fragmented landscapes near Lake Erie: defining quality stopover sites for migrating landbirds. $90,220.

Ohio Lake Erie Commission, Lake Erie Protection Fund. 2003-05. Forest habitats in fragmented landscapes near Lake Erie: defining quality stopover sites for migrating landbirds. $66,500.

ODNR-Division of Wildlife. 2001-04. Suitability of riparian and upland forests as stopover habitat for migrating birds: a multi-scale approach. $28,957.

Page 59: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

59

U.S. Golf Association & Natl. Fish and Wildlife Foundation. 2002-03. Assessment of Midwestern

golf courses as breeding habitat for the Red-headed Woodpecker. $60,000. Co-PI: A. Rodewald.

Research Presentations (Since 2008) MacDade, L., P. G. Rodewald, and K. A. Hatch. 2010. Contribution of emergent aquatic insects to

refueling by spring migrant songbirds. Annual Meeting of the Wilson Ornithological Society, Geneva, New York.

DeGroote, L., and P. G. Rodewald. 2009. Effects of forest patch size on refueling performance of three species of songbirds during spring migration. 127th stated Meeting of the American Ornithologists' Union, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Rodewald, P. G., S. N. Matthews, and A. A. Buchanan. 2009. Movements and stopover duration of migrant forest songbirds within different landscapes. 127th stated Meeting of the American Ornithologists' Union, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Matthews, S. N., and P. G. Rodewald. 2008. Stopover habitat use of migratory landbirds within urban forest patches in central Ohio. 69th Midwest Fish & Wildlife Conference in Columbus, Ohio.

MacDade, L., and P. G. Rodewald. 2008. Contribution of emergent aquatic insects to migrant refueling performance in northwestern Ohio. 69th Midwest Fish & Wildlife Conference, Columbus, OH

MacDade, L., and P. G. Rodewald. 2008. Contribution of emergent aquatic insects to migrant refueling performance in the Western Lake Erie Basin of Ohio. 126th Stated Meeting of the American Ornithologists' Union, Portland, Oregon.

Rodewald, P. G., A. A. Buchanan, and S. N. Matthews. 2008. Stopover behavior of migrant landbirds in two fragmented landscapes: Lakeshore and inland regions of Ohio. Joint Meeting of the Wilson Ornithological Society and the Association of Field Ornithologists, Mobile, Alabama.

Buchanan, A. A., and P. G. Rodewald. 2008. Movements, habitat selection, and stopover duration of migrant songbirds in the western Lake Erie basin of Ohio. Joint Meeting of the Wilson Ornithological Society and the Association of Field Ornithologists, Mobile, Alabama.

Page 60: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

60

Jeff S. Sharp The Ohio State University [email protected] School of Environment and Natural Resources (614)292-9410 (W) 320B Kottman Hall (614)263-9604 (H) 2021 Coffey Road Columbus, OH 43210 Education Ph.D. in Sociology, Iowa State University, 1998 M.S. in Rural Sociology, Iowa State University, 1994 B.A. with Distinction, Political Science, Iowa State University, 1990 Junior year: University College of Swansea, U.K., Dept. of English, 1988-89 Professional Experience Associate Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources and OSU Extension State

Specialist, Rural-Urban Policy, The Ohio State University. 2010-present. Research Specialties Rural Sociology, Sociology of Agriculture and Food Systems, Rural-Urban Interface Teaching Experience Courses Taught, Ohio State University:

RS 105: Introduction to Rural Sociology RS 733: Sociology of Agriculture and Food Systems, Graduate Level

Refereed Publications Inwood, M. Shoshanah and Jeff S. Sharp. 2011. Farm persistence and adaptation at the rural-urban

interface: Succession and farm adjustment. Journal of Rural Studies. (Formally Accepted) Schupp, Justin and Jeff S. Sharp. 2011. Social Basis of Home Gardening. Agriculture and Human

Values. (Formally Accepted) Adua, Lazarus and Jeff S. Sharp. 2011. Explaining Residential Energy Consumption: A Focus on

Location and Race Differences in Natural Gas Use. Journal of Rural Social Sciences. Vol. 26, no. 1: 107-141.

Sharp, Jeff S, Jill K. Clark, Gregory A. Davis, Molly Bean Smith, Jefferson S. McCutcheon. 2011. Adapting Community and Economic Development Tools to the Study of Local Foods: The Case of Knox County, OH. Journal of Extension. Vol. 49, no. 2.

Sharp, Jeff S., Doug Jackson-Smith and Leah Smith. 2011. Agricultural Economic Development at the Rural-Urban Interface: Community Organization, Policy and Agricultural Change. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development. Vol. 1, no. 4.

Smith, Molly Bean and Jeff S. Sharp. 2011. Profiling Alternative Food System Supporters: The Personal and Social Basis of Local and Organic Food Support. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems. Vol. 26, no. 3. : 243-254.

Adua, Lazarus and Jeff S. Sharp. 2010 “Examining survey participation and data quality: The significance of topic salience and incentives.” Survey Methodology 36(1): 95-109.

Page 61: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

61

Inwood, Shoshanah M., Jeff S. Sharp, Deb Stinner, and Richard Moore. 2009. Restaurants, chefs and local foods: Insights drawn from application of a diffusion of innovation framework. Agriculture and Human Values. 26(3): 177-191.

Sharp, Jeff S. and Lazarus Adua. 2009. The Social Basis of Agro-Environmental Concern: Physical versus Social Proximity. Rural Sociology. 74(1): 56-85.

Book Chapters Clark, Jill K., Shoshanah Inwood, Jeff S. Sharp, Douglas Jackson-Smith. 2010. Community-level

Influences on Agricultural Trajectories: Seven Cases across the Exurban U.S. in Geographical Perspectives on Sustainable Rural Change. Edited by Dick G. Winchell, Doug Ramsey, Rhonda Koster, and Guy M. Robinson. Brandon University Rural Development Institute: Brandon, Manitoba. Pp. 200-219.

Extension Publications, Research Monographs and Working Papers Clark, Jill K., Shoshanah Inwood and Jeff S. Sharp. 2011. Scaling-up Connections between

Regional Ohio Specialty Crop Producers and Local Markets: Distribution as the Missing Link. Columbus, OH: Department of Agricultural, Environmental and Developmental Economics.

Inwood, Shoshanah M., Jeff S. Sharp, Doug Jackson-Smith, Jill Clark. 2009. The Persistence of Agriculture at the Rural-Urban Interface (RUI): Does the Cost of Health Insurance Make a Difference. Social Responsibility Initiative Topical Report Series. Columbus, OH, USA. (Report No. 09-05).

Sharp, Jeff S., Michael D. Webb, and Molly Bean Smith. 2009. Planting the Seeds of Sustainable Economic Development: Knox County's Local Food System. Social Responsibility Initiative Topical Report Series. Columbus, OH, USA. (Report No. 09-04).

Inwood, Shoshanah M. and Jeff S. Sharp. 2009. Succession and Enterprise Adaptation at the Rural-Urban Interface. Social Responsibility Initiative Topical Report Series. Columbus, OH. (Report No. 09-03).

Page 62: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

62

Brian K. Slater Associate Professor, Soil Science School of Environment and Natural Resources The Ohio State University 2021 Coffey Road Columbus OH 43210

Phone (614) 292-5891 Facsimile (614) 292-7432 E-Mail [email protected]

Education Degrees/Diploma Institution Date Major Ph.D. University of Wisconsin–Madison 1994 Soil Science M.Agr.Sc. University of Queensland 1987 Soil Science B.Agr.Sc. University of Queensland 1980 Land Resources Employment Columbus, Ohio: 2005-present Associate Professor, Soil Science, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The

Ohio State University 1997-2004 Assistant Professor, Sustainable Soil and Land Management, School of Natural

Resources, The Ohio State University. Australia: 1996-1997 Senior Land Resources Officer, Queensland Department of Natural Resources. 1995 Project Leader, Murray-Darling Basin Soil Information Strategy, CSIRO Division of

Soils, Canberra, Australia. 1982–1995 Land Resources Officer, Land Use and Fisheries, Queensland Department of Primary

Industries, Brisbane, Toowoomba, Roma, Australia 1981–1982 Environmental Consultant, CSR Energy Division, Brisbane 1980–1981 Research Scholar, Department of Agriculture, University of Queensland University of Wisconsin–Madison: 1992–1994 Research Assistant, Institute for Environmental Studies 1991–1992 Research Assistant, Department of Soil Science Honors and Awards The Ohio State University: Rodney F. Plimpton Outstanding Teacher Award (CFAES) Pomerene Departmental Teaching Award, 2007 (SENR) Association of Ohio Pedologists Pedologist Merit Award, 2011 University of Wisconsin-Madison: Gureen Gulsteen (Gjermundson) Scholarship 1991–1992 O.N. Allen Scholarship 1991 University of Queensland: University of Queensland Research Scholarship 1980–1982 Australian Agricultural Council Scholarship 1972–1975

Page 63: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

63

Recent Extramural Funding Support 2009 Natural Resources Conservation Service and University of Idaho, funding for Conversion of

Ohio soil characterization database to national standards (PI B.K. Slater. $46,000) 2008 Natural Resources Conservation Service, funding for development of system to predict crop

yields on diverse Ohio soils. (PI B.K. Slater. $8000). 2005 Ohio Coal Development Office, funding for Research and Demonstration of Beneficial

Agricultural Uses of FGD-Products in Ohio (PI W.A. Dick, Co-PIs B.K. Slater, R.W. Mullen, J.M. Bigham, $529,500).

2005 CONSOL Energy Inc., funding for Analysis of Alternatives for Restoring a Coal Slurry Impoundment and Refuse Pile at the Meigs No. 31 Mine Site: Assessment of Current Wildlife Utilization and Potential for Wildlife Habitat Development. (PI R.J. Gates, Co-PIs V.L. Bouchard, L.R. Williams, B.K. Slater, J.M. Bigham $63,100).

2005 Ohio Coastal Management Program, funding for Hydrologic Studies at Mentor Marsh (PIs B.K. Slater and C. Davis, $50,000).

2004 Natural Resources Conservation Service, funding for Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey Digitizing Enhancement Program, Part 2. (PIs B.K. Slater and N. Smeck $116,000).

2002 Natural Resources Conservation Service, funding for Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey Digitizing Enhancement Program. (PIs B.K. Slater and N. Smeck $132,000).

2002 A Pilot Program for Geospatial Outreach Education in Ohio. Ohio Space Grant Consortium. (PI B.K. Slater. $40,000).

2000 Ohio Coastal Management Program, funding for Comprehensive GIS for Mentor Marsh and Its Watershed (PIs B.K. Slater and C. Davis, $55,000).

2000 Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, funding for Spatial modeling of soil organic carbon (PI B.K. Slater, $15,000).

Recent Peer Reviewed Publications Tirado-Corbala, R. and Slater, B.K. (2010) Soil compaction effects on the establishment of three

tropical tree species. Journal of Arboriculture and Urban Forestry. 36:164-170. Chen L., Ramsier, C., Bigham, J., Slater, B., Kost, D., Lee, Y., and. Dick, W. (2009) Oxidation of

FGD-CaSO3 and effect on soil chemical properties when applied to the soil surface. Fuel 88:1167–1172.

Mishra, U., Lal, R., Slater, B.K., Calhoun, F., Liu, D., and Van Meirvenne, M. (2009) Predicting Soil Organic Carbon Stock Using Profile Depth Distribution Functions and Ordinary Kriging. Soil Science Society of America Journal 73: 614-621.

Hewitt, A., McKenzie, N.J., Grundy M.J., Slater B.K. (2008) Qualitative survey. In ‘Guidelines for surveying soil and land resources. 2nd Edition’ Australian Soil and Land Survey Handbook Vo. 2. (Eds McKenzie N.J., Webster R., Grundy M.J., Ringrose-Voase A.J.) (CSIRO Publishing: Melbourne).

Venteris, E.R. and B.K. Slater, (2005) A comparison between contour elevation data sources for DEM creation and soil carbon prediction, Coshocton, Ohio. Transactions in GIS 9:179-198.

Shukla, M., Slater, B. K., Lal, R., and Cepuder, P. (2004) Spatial Variability of Soil Properties and Potential Management Classification of a Chernozemic Field in Lower Austria. Soil Science 169:852-860.

Tan, Z., Lal, R., Smeck, N. E., Calhoun Jr, F. G., Slater, B. K., Parkinson, B., and Gehring, R. (2004). Taxonomic and Geographic Distribution of Soil Organic Carbon Pools in Ohio. Soil Science Society of America Journal 68:1896-1904.

Page 64: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

64

Slater, B. K. (2004) Spatial Variability of Soils. in R. Lal (ed) Encyclopedia of Soil Science. Marcel

Dekker, Inc. Calhoun, F.G., J.M. Bigham, and B.K. Slater (2002) Relationships among plant available

phosphorus, fertilizer sales, and water quality in northwestern Ohio. Journal of Environmental Quality 31: 38-46.

Calhoun, F.F. D.B. Baker, and B.K. Slater (2002) Soils, water quality, and watershed size: interactions in the Maumee and Sandusky River basins of northwestern Ohio. Journal of Environmental Quality 31:47-53.

Mancl, K. and B.K. Slater (2001) Suitability of Ohio soils for on-site wastewater treatment. Ohio Journal of Science 101:48-56.

Calhoun, F. G., N. E. Smeck, B. K. Slater, J. M. Bigham and G. F. Hall. (2001) Predicting bulk density of Ohio soils from morphology, genetic principles and laboratory characterization data. Soil Science Society of America Journal 65:811-819.

Thwaites, R.N. and B.K. Slater, (2000) Soil-landscape resource assessment for plantations – a conceptual framework towards an explicit multi-scale approach. Forest Ecology and Management 138:123-138.

Page 65: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

65

S. Mažeika P. Sullivan Professional Preparation B.A., Anthropology & Native American Studies, 1997. Anthropology Department, Dartmouth

College, Hanover, NH. Phi Beta Kappa, Magna Cum Laude. M.S., Biology, 2000. Department of Biology, University of Vermont (UVM), Burlington, VT.

Project, Stream Restoration in Agricultural Landscapes. Ph.D., Natural Resources, 2004. School of Natural Resources, University of Vermont (UVM),

Burlington, VT. Advisor, Dr. Mary C. Watzin; Dissertation, Linking Fluvial Geomorphology and Biotic Condition in Vermont Streams and Rivers.

Postdoctoral Institutions: University of Vermont (UVM), Watershed Ecology (06/04 – 07/05); University of Idaho (UI), Stream and Riparian Ecology (08/05 – 12/06).

Appointments Assistant Professor – School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University

(OSU) (10/2008-present) Research Scientist II – Stream and Watershed Ecology, Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources,

University of Idaho (UI) (08/2006 – 06/2008) High School Teacher – Montpelier HS, Montpelier, VT; Carlos Escobar HS, Loiza, PR (1997 –

2001) Select Publications (10) Sullivan, S.M.P. and K.T. Vierling. In press. Exploring spatially-explicit environmental linkages in

mountain watersheds with the American dipper (Cinclus mexicanus). Ecography. Cianfrani, C.M., Sullivan, S.M.P., Hession, C.W., and M.C. Watzin. In press. A multitaxonomic

approach to understanding local- versus watershed-scale influences on stream biota in the Lake Champlain Basin, Vermont. River Research and Applications.

Sullivan, S.M.P. and M.C. Watzin. 2010. Towards a functional understanding of the role of sediment aggradation on stream fish condition. River Research and Applications 26: 1298-1314.

Cianfrani, C.M., Sullivan, S.M.P., Hession, W.C., and M.C. Watzin. 2009. Mixed stream channel morphologies: implications for fish community diversity. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 19: 147-156.

Jackson, B.J. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2009. Influence of wildfire severity on riparian plant community heterogeneity in an Idaho, U.S.A. wilderness. Forest Ecology and Management 259: 24-32.

Sullivan, S.M.P. and K.T. Vierling. 2009. Experimental and ecological implications of evening bird surveys in stream-riparian ecosystems (Feature Article). Environmental Management 44: 789-799.

Sullivan, S.M.P. and M.C. Watzin. 2009. Stream–floodplain connectivity and fish assemblage diversity in the Champlain Valley, Vermont, U.S.A. Journal of Fish Biology 74: 1394-1418.

Sullivan, S.M.P., and M.C. Watzin. 2008. Relating stream physical habitat condition and concordance of biotic productivity across multiple taxa. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 65: 2667–2677.

Sullivan, S.M.P., M.C. Watzin, and W.S. Keeton. 2007. A riverscape perspective on habitat associations among riverine bird assemblages in the Lake Champlain Basin, USA. Landscape Ecology 22: 1169-1186.

Page 66: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

66

Sullivan, S.M.P., M.C. Watzin, and W.C. Hession. 2006. Influence of geomorphic condition on stream fish communities in Vermont, USA. Freshwater Biology 51: 1811-1826.

Presentations I have authored or coauthored 48 presentations at local, state, national and international venues.

• 5 Most Recent Invited Seminars o OSU Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, Columbus, OH.

February 2011. “From the Wilderness to the Urban Jungle: River Science at the Extremes.” o Wilma H. Schiemeier Olentangy River Wetland Research Park, Columbus, OH. October

2010. “'The Scioto Runs Through It': Riverine Food Webs and Energy Fluxes along an Urban to Rural Gradient.”

o OH EPA, Groveport, OH. February 2010. “Ecogeomorphology: Linking Fundamental and Applied Science in Stream and River Ecosystems.”

o Ball State University, Muncie, IN. April 2009. “‘Food Webs for Thought’: Considering Aquatic-Terrestrial Energy Flows and Redefining Stream-Riparian Food Webs.”

o University of Cape Town, Cape Town, SA. February 2009. “Fractals, Food Webs, and Feathers: The Role of Birds in Shaping River Ecology.”

Current Grants and Contracts 1. Developing a Watershed Scorecard for Evaluation, Decision-Support, and Management of

Ecosystem Services in Midwestern Agroecosystems. Pending. USDA-NIFA. $489,544. Co-PI with Wilson, Witter, and Ward.

2. Consequences of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid to Coupled Dynamics across Riparian and Stream Ecosystems. 2011-2012. OARDC SEEDS. $99,992.00. Co-PI with C. Goebel and D. Apsley.

3. Matching Graduate School Tuition and Fee Award. 2009-2013. OSU Graduate School. $15,240/year. PI.

4. Landscape Perspectives on Stream Ecology and Fisheries Management. Started in 2009. USDA-CSREES. (McIntyre-Stennis Funds, $1,500/year). PI.

5. Native Fish, Native Streams: Implementation of Rare Fish Propagation and Reintroduction. 2010-2013. Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR). $135,450.00. PI.

6. Dam Removal Strategies for Species of Greatest Conservation Need. 2011-2012. ODNR. Phase 1: $4,761.00, Phase 2: $10,979. PI.

7. Wet Laboratory/Rare Fish Propagation Facility. 2011. ODNR. $67,350. PI. 8. Understanding the Ecological and Social Constraints to Achieving Sustainable Fisheries

Resource Policy and Management. 2011-2014. NCRA Multistate Research. (Hatch Funds, $Pending). Co-PI with Bailey et al.

9. Rose Run Bioassessment. 2010-2011. Town of New Albany Ohio. $4,000.00. PI. Synergistic Activities • American Fisheries Society Student Subunit Founder & Advisor, OSU, 2008-present. • Multiple outreach and educational activities related to aquatic resource conservation and

management for Columbus area youth, 2008-present. • Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) Summer Program Mentor, UI, 2007/08. • Developed ‘Module-based’ curriculum for Riparian Ecology Course, UI, 2007. • Riparian and stream habitat assessment training workshops for Community Watershed Groups,

Vermont, 2002-2004. • Languages: Spanish (native), Lithuanian (native), French (proficient), Italian (conversational).

Page 67: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

67

• Permits & Licenses: Level II Educator’s License (Grades 7-12, Spanish & Biology), Federal Master Bird Banding Permit, OH State Wildlife Collection Permit.

Thesis Advisor (all OSU) (12 total)

Jeremy Alberts, M.S.; Clarissa Bey, MENR; Kristi Harraman, M.S.; Breeanne Jackson, Ph.D.; Adam Kautza, Ph.D.; Justin Loesch, MENR; Lars Meyer, M.S.; Ryan Pilewski, MENR; Leslie Rieck, Ph.D.; Sarah Rose (Ph.D. – co-advise with A. Rodewald); Ethan Simmons, M.S.; Paradzayi Tagwireyi, Ph.D.

Page 68: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

68

Eric Toman School of Environment and Natural Resources | The Ohio State University | 316C Kottman Hall; 2021 Coffey Road, Columbus, OH 43210 | Phone 614.292.7313, Fax 614.292.7432 Professional Preparation Utah State University, B.S., Environmental Studies, 1999 Oregon State University, M.S., Forest Resources, 2002 Oregon State University, Ph.D., Forest Resources, 2005 Oregon State University, Post-doc in College of Forestry, 2005-2007 Appointments 2008-Present Assistant Professor, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State

University 2007-08 American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), Science and Technology

Policy Fellow, NOAA Climate Program Office 2005-07 Post-doctoral Faculty Research Association, College of Forestry, Oregon State University 2000-05 Graduate Fellow and Research Assistant, Oregon State University Selected Refereed Publications (last 3 years) McCaffrey, S., E. Toman, M. Stidham and B. Shindler. In Review. Social science research related

to wildfire management: An overview of recent findings and future research needs. International Journal of Wildland Fire.

McCaffrey, S., M. Stidham, E. Toman, and B. Shindler. 2011. Outreach Programs, Peer Pressure, and Common Sense: What motivates homeowners to mitigate fire risk? Environmental Management. 48(3): 475-88.

Toman, E., M. Stidham, B. Shindler, and S. McCaffrey. 2011. Reducing fuels in the Wildland Urban Interface: Community perceptions of agency fuels treatments. International Journal of Wildland Fire. 20(3): 340-349.

Bruskotter, J.T., E. Toman, S.A. Enzler, and R.H. Schmidt. 2010. Are Gray Wolves Endangered in the Northern Rocky Mountains? A Role for Social Science in Listing Determinations. BioScience. 60(11): 941-948.

Shindler, B., E. Toman, and S. McCaffrey. 2009. Public Perspectives of Fire, Fuels, and the Forest Service in the Great Lakes Region: A Survey of Citizen-Agency Communication and Trust. International Journal of Wildland Fire. 18: 157-164.

Toman, E., B. Shindler, J. Absher, and S. McCaffrey. 2008. Post-fire communications: The influence of site visits on public support. Journal of Forestry. 106(1): 25-30.

Grants Awarded (last 3 years) Toman, E., and R. Wilson. Restoring landscapes in the context of environmental change: A mental

models analysis. USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station. Grant Awarded: July 2011 ($92,873)

Martin, J., E. Irwin, S. Ludsin, E. Nisbet, E. Toman, R. Wilson. Co-Evolution of Upstream Human Behavior and Downstream Ecosystem Services in a Changing Climate. NSF, Coupled Natural and Human Systems. Grant Awarded: June 2011 ($1,499,995)

Bruskotter, J. and E. Toman. Human dimensions of Ohio fisheries. Ohio Division of Wildlife. Grant Awarded: June 2010 ($91,337)

Page 69: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

69

Goebel, C., E. Toman, D. Hix, R. Wilson, R.G. Corace III, B. Palik, R. Kolka. Developing a fire science network and delivery system to enhance the management and restoration of fire dependent forest ecosystems of the northern Lake States. Joint Fire Science Program. Grant Awarded: March 2010 ($397,827)

Toman, E. and C. Olsen. Evaluating communication strategies and local partnerships: Methods for reducing fuels, sharing responsibility, and building trust." Joint Fire Science Program. Grant Awarded: March 2010 ($194,781)

Toman, E., R. Wilson, R. Williams, S. Gehrt, D. Hix, and C. Goebel. Fuel treatments in mixed pine forests in the Great Lakes Region: A comprehensive guide to planning and implementation. Joint Fire Science Program. Grant Awarded: April 2009. ($151,363)

Teaching ENR 340: Introduction to the Management of Public Lands, 3 Credits (Winter)

Course material explores the role of conservation and outdoor recreation in U.S. environmental history, the development of American attitudes toward nature, significant leaders in the conservation movement and examines how these forces shape today’s resource management agencies and corresponding policies. Enrollment 2011: 110 students

ENR 738: Climate and Society, 4 Credits (Winter) This course examines the links between climatic changes and human societies and examines social influences on our current state of knowledge, impacts, and potential responses (policy and behavioral). Enrollment 2011: 23 students

ENR 119: Survey of Environmental Parks, Policy, and Management Careers, 1 Credit (Spring) The course explores academic preparation for professional career opportunities in conservation policy development and implementation, natural resource management, park administration, and recreation planning. Enrollment 2011: 53 students.

ENR 203: Society and Natural Resources, 5 Credits (Spring) This course emphasizes the human dimensions of ecosystems and natural resources primarily from a sociological perspective. Course material applies concepts and theories from sociology to explore how human societies interact with the environment. Enrollment 2011: 91 students

ENR 899 Sustaining Human Societies and the Environment, 10 Credits (Summer) This 3.5-week study abroad program examines natural and social aspects of natural resource use and environmental conservation of North Queensland, Australia. The goal of this course is to draw on the Queensland, Australia case to integrate the different perspectives of diverse natural, biological, and social science disciplines to improve understanding of relationships between human societies and the natural environment. Enrollment 2011: 29 students

Synergistic Activities Organizing Committee: International Association of Wildland Fire, Second Human Dimensions of

Wildland Fire Conference, San Antonio, TX, April 2010 Climate Change Curriculum Committee, National Council for Science and the Environment

Council of Environmental Deans and Directors Reviewer: Journal of Forestry, Environmental Management, Society and Natural Resources,

International Journal of Wildland Fire, and Human Ecology Review Host and organizer of Wildland Fire Summit: A Decade of Social Science Research, Portland, OR,

2008 U.S. Delegate: 28th Subsidiary Body on Science and Technological Advice/UNFCCC negotiations,

Bonn, Germany, 2008

Page 70: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

70

Roger A. Williams School of Environment and Natural Resources phone: (614) 688-4061 367 D Kottman Hall , 2021 Coffey Road fax: (614) 292-7432 The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210 email: [email protected] Education 1986 Ph.D., Forest Resource Management, University of Maine, Orono, Maine. 1981 M.S., Forestry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 1977 B.S., Forest Biology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio Work Experience Date Title Institution 2004 – present

Associate Professor, Forest Ecosystem Analysis And Management

School of Natural Resources, The Ohio State University

1999 - present Director and Chairman, Honors and Scholarship Program

School of Natural Resources, The Ohio State University

1998 – 2004 Assistant Professor, Forest Ecosystem Analysis And Management

School of Natural Resources, The Ohio State University

1994 – 1998 Associate Professor, Forestry Faculty School of Forestry, Louisiana Tech University

1986 – 1994 Assistant Professor, Forestry Faculty School of Forestry, Louisiana Tech University

International Forestry Work Experience China— 1) Program Director, SENR China Research Abroad Program, June – July, 2011; 2) Provided a lecture series on Forest Carbon Sequestration and Forest Management in Guangxi Province. Lectures presented at Guangxi Ecological Engineering Vocational and Technical College, Guangxi Forest Research Institute, and College of Forestry at Guangxi University. May 9 – 17, 2007, and June 23 – July 1, 2009. 3) Consultant for Pacific Millennium Corp., Ltd., Hong Kong. 05/1992 – 02/1994. Russia— Collaborative projects with Tomsk State Univ., Russia, to improve the forest economy in southwester Siberia. (US State Dept. Funding). 09/2001 – 08/ 2006. Research Focus 1) Forest carbon sequestration – forest carbon dynamics and management 2) Use of prescribed fire combined with silvicultural systems to regenerate oak species. Teaching FAES H100 – Freshman Honors Orientation ENR 323 – Forest Biometrics ENR 319 – Introduction to Forestry, Fisheries, and Wildlife ENR 350.01 – Wildland Fire Management ENR 350.01 – Wildland Fire Laboratory ENR H590 – Honors Research Colloquium ENR 606.02 – Natural Resources Management (capstone)

Page 71: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

71

ENR 635 – Forest Management ENR 734 – Forest Ecosystem Management Selected Publications Williams, Roger A. and Yuhua Tao. 2011. A carbon management diagram for oak-hickory forests

in southern Ohio. Northern Journal of Applied Forestry. (in press). Titchenell, Marne A., Roger A. Williams, Stanley D. Gehrt. 2011. Bat response to shelterwood

harvests and forest structure in oak-hickory forests. Forest Ecology and Management 262(6):980–988

Downs, James D.; Roger A. Williams; and Joni A. Downs. 2011. The Effects of Shelterwood Harvesting on Oak Regeneration Two Years after Harvest in Southern Ohio. P 262 - 269. In Proc: Fei, Songlin; Lhotka, John M.; Stringer, Jeffrey W.; Gottschalk, Kurt W.; Miller, Gary W., eds. 17th Central Hardwood Forest Conference; 2010 April 5-7; Lexington, KY; Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-P-78. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 678 p. CD-ROM

Tao, Yuhua and Roger A. Williams. 2010. Fuel loading and the potential for carbon emissions from fire following two shelterwood harvest treatments in southern Ohio. Journal of Genomics and Applied Biology. Vol. 1 No 1 DOI:10.5376/gab.2010.01.0001. 13p.

Williams, Roger A. 2010. Prescribed fire and shelterwood harvests- a perfect match to regenerate oak forest in Ohio? The Ohio Woodland Journal. 17(3):18-19.

Williams, Roger A. 2010. Is carbon management in the future of Ohio's forests? The Ohio Woodland Journal. 17(2):18 - 20.

Danchenko, A., R.A. Williams, S. Kylizhskiy, and M. Nicodemus. 2010. Comparison of carbon content and carbon equations for tree species in southern Ohio and Tomsk, Russia. Miscellaneous research paper. Tomsk State University, Tomsk, Russia. 7 p.

Williams, R.A., and S. E. Schafer. 2007. Forest carbon sequestration and storage of the in Kargasoksky Leshoz of the Tomsk Oblast, Russia—current status and the investment potential. P. 363 – 370. In Climate change and terrestrial Carbon sequestration in Central Asia. Lal, R., M. Suleimenov, B. A. Stewart, D. O. Hansen, and P. Doraiswamy (eds.) Taylor and Francis Publishers, New York, NY.

Schwemlein, D. J. and R. A. Williams. 2007. Effects of landscape position and season of burn on fire temperature in southern Ohio’s mixed-oak forests. P. 250 – 257 In Proc: 15th central hardwood forest conference. Buckley, David S.; Clatterbuck, Wayne K., eds. e-Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS–101. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 770 p. [CD-ROM].

Avina, M. M., R. A. Williams, and S. D. Gehrt. 2007. A method of quantifying forest vertical structure for the purpose of evaluating bat habitat. P. 355 – 363 In Proc: 15th central hardwood forest conference. Buckley, David S.; Clatterbuck, Wayne K., eds. e-Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS–101. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 770 p. [CD-ROM].

Nicodemus, M. A., and R. A. Williams. 2004. Quantifying aboveground carbon storage in managed forest ecosystems in Ohio. In: Yaussy, Daniel A.; Hix, David M.; Long, Robert P.; Goebel, P. Charles, eds. 2004. Proceedings. 14th Central Hardwood Forest Conference; 2004. March 16-19; Wooster, OH. Gen. Tech. Rep. NE-316. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture. Forest Service. Northeastern Research Station. 539 p. [CD-ROM].

Williams, R. A. and J. C. Kinard. 2003. The National Fire Plan for the United States of America: framework and implementation. In Proc: Mikhailovich, G. A., ed. Wildlife Fires: Initiation,

Page 72: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

72

Spread, Suppressing and Ecological Consequences. Tomsk State University, Krasnoyarsk, Russia. June 30 - July 5.

Williams, R. A. 2003. Use of stand density index as an alternative to stocking percent in upland hardwoods. North. J. Appl. For. 20(4):1-6.

Williams, R. A. and J. C. Kinard. 2003. A strategy for economic development of the forestry sector in Tomsk, Russia. J. Forestry. 101(5 ):36-41.

Williams, R. A. and R. B. Heiligmann. 2003. Effects of site quality and season of clearcutting on upland hardwood forest composition 38 years after harvest. For. Ecol. Management. 177(1):1-10.

Moran, L.A. and R. A. Williams. 2002. Comparison of three dendrometers in measuring dbh. North. J. Appl. For. 19(1):28-33.

Williams, R. A., and K. W. Farrish. 2001. Late-rotation fertilization in loblolly pine plantations– can it profit? Forest Landowner. 60(2):50-56.

Williams, R.A., and K. W. Farrish. 2000. Response of loblolly pine plantations to late-rotation fertilization and herbicide applications in north Louisiana. South. J. Appl. For. 24(3):166-175.

Page 73: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

73

Robyn Suzanne Wilson Assistant Professor 316D Kottman Hall Risk Analysis and Decision Science 2021 Coffey Rd Environmental Social Science Group Columbus, OH 43210 School of Environment and Natural Resources Phone: (614) 247-6169 The Ohio State University Email: [email protected] Degrees 2006 Ph.D., The Ohio State University School of Environment and Natural Resources, Natural

Resource Mgmt 2004 M.S., The Ohio State University School of Environment and Natural Resources, Natural

Resource Mgmt 2000 B.A. (Honors), Denison University, Environmental Studies Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles Hersha, D.K., R.S. Wilson and A. Baird. In press. A conceptual model of the citizen stream

stewardship decision process in an urbanizing midwestern United States watershed. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management.

Syal, S., R.S. Wilson, J. Crawford and J. Lutz. 2011. Climate change and human health: What influences the adoption of adaptation programs in the United States public health system? Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change. Published in advance at: http://www.springerlink.com/content/rn07446033124q81/fulltext.pdf

Hunter, C., C. Jones, N. Strachan, R.S. Wilson, O. Rotariu, D. Chadwick, P. Cross, A.P. Williams, and L.A. McCritchie. 2011. The relationship between lay and technical views of E. coli O157 risk. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Vol. 366, no. 1573: 1999-2009.

Doohan, D., R.S. Wilson, E. Canales, and J. Parker. 2010. Investigating the human dimension of weed management: New tools of the trade. Weed Science. no. 58. : 503-510.

Wilson, R.S. and J.L. Arvai. 2010. Why less is more: Exploring affect-based value neglect. Journal of Risk Research. Vol. 4, no. 13: 399-409.

Wilson, R.S., P.L. Winter, L.A. Maguire, T.J. Ascher. 2010. Managing wildfire events: Risk-based decision making among a group of federal fire managers. Risk Analysis. Vol. 31, no. 5: 805-818.

Cattaneo, A.A., R.S. Wilson, D. Doohan, and J.T. LeJeune. 2009. Bovine veterinarians' knowledge, beliefs, and practices regarding antibiotic resistance on Ohio dairy farms. Journal of Dairy Science. Vol. 92: 3494-3502.

Wilson, R.S. and J.T. Bruskotter. 2009. Assessing the impact of decision frame and existing attitudes on support for wolf restoration in the United States. Human Dimensions of Wildlife. Vol. 14, no. 5: 353-365.

Wilson, R.S., D.M. Hix, P.C. Goebel, and R.G. Corace III. 2009. Identifying land manager objectives and alternatives for mixed-pine forest ecosystem management and restoration in eastern Upper Michigan. Ecological Restoration. Vol. 27, no. 4: 407-416.

Wilson, R.S., J. Parker, D. Kovacs, D. Doohan, and J. LeJeune. 2009. Contamination prevention and response related to fresh and fresh-cut produce: An expert perspective on the farmer decision making process. Food Protection Trends. Vol. 29, no. 8: 488-492.

Page 74: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

74

Wilson, R.S., N. Hooker, M. Tucker, J. LeJeune, and D. Doohan. 2009. Targeting the farmer

decision making process: A pathway to increased adoption of integrated weed management. Crop Protection. Vol. 28: 756-764.

Wilson, R.S. 2008. Balancing emotion and cognition: A case for decision aiding in conservation efforts. Conservation Biology. Vol. 22: 1452-1460.

Wilson, R.S., J.L. Arvai, and H.R. Arkes. 2008. My loss is your loss..sometimes: Loss aversion and the effect of motivational biases. Risk Analysis. Vol. 28, no. 4: 929-938.

Wilson, R.S., M.A. Tucker, N.H. Hooker, J.T. LeJeune, and D. Doohan. 2008. Perceptions and beliefs about weed management: Perspectives of Ohio grain and produce farmers. Weed Technology. Vol. 22: 339-350.

Wilson, R.S. and J.L. Arvai. 2006. Evaluating the quality of structured environmental management decisions. Environmental Science & Technology. Vol. 40, no. 16: 4831-4837.

Wilson, R.S. and J.L. Arvai. 2006. When less is more: How affect influences preferences when comparing low and high-risk options. Journal of Risk Research. Vol. 9, no. 2: 165-178.

Editor-Reviewed Journal Articles Gore, M.L., R.S. Wilson, W.F. Siemer, H. Wieczorek-Hudenko, C.E. Clarke, P.S. Hart, L.A.

Maguire and B.A. Muter. 2009. Application of risk concepts to wildlife management: Special issue introduction. Human Dimensions of Wildlife. Vol. 14, no. 5: 301-313.

Chapters In Books Wilson, R.S., G.E. Hitzhusen, J.T. Bruskotter, and A. Zwickle. In press. Understanding student

environmental interests when designing multidisciplinary curriculum. In Higher Education for Sustainability: Cases, challenges and opportunities across the curriculum. Edited by L.F. Johnston. Routledge.

Grants 2005 - 2006 "Doctoral Dissertation Research in Decision Risk and Management Science:

Revisiting prospect theory under conditions of chronic loss and the attribution of value." National Science Foundation. $19,000.00. Co-Investigator.

2005 - 2008 "Restoration-based fuel reduction recommendations for mixed-pine forests of upper Michigan." US Fish and Wildlife Service Joint Fire Sciences Program. $299,411.00. Co-Investigator.

2007 - 2011 "Minimizing microbial food safety hazards of fresh and fresh-cut fruits and vegetables." US Department of Agriculture Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service National Integrated Food Safety Initiative. $2,500,000.00. Co-Investigator.

2008 - 2009 "Assessing the impact of positive and negative outcomes on the acceptability of wildfire management strategies among USFS personnel." USDA Forest Service. $39,377.00. Principal Investigator.

2008 - 2010 "Engaging the public health system in reducing the societal carbon footprint." The Ohio State University Climate Water Carbon and Public Health Preparedness and Infectious Disease Targeted Investments in Excellence Programs. $100,000.00. Co-Investigator.

2008 - 2011 "Designing watershed-based education and extension efforts through a mental models research approach." USDA Cooperative State Research Education &

Page 75: Nicholas T. Basta of Soil and Environmental Chemistry The ... Faculty CVs.pdf · James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Research in Agricultural Science, Oklahoma State Univ., 1998

School of Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Curriculum Vitae

75

Extension Service National Integrated Water Quality Program. $390,000.00. Principal Investigator.

2008 - 2013 "Designing effective land management policies for the 21st century Ohio River Basin: Managing the carbon and nutrient cycles to maintain and restore water quantity and quality." Ohio State Climate Water Carbon Targeted Investment in Excellence. $1,299,911.00. Principal Investigator.

2009 - 2010 "Developing a fire science network and delivery system for the northern Lake States." US Fish and Wildlife Service Joint Fire Sciences Program. $20,079.00. Co-Investigator.

2009 - 2011 "Fuel treatments in mixed-pine forests in the Great Lakes Region: A comprehensive guide to planning and implementation." US Fish and Wildlife Service Joint Fire Sciences. $151,363.00. Co-Investigator.

2009 - 2013 "Mental models and participatory research to redesign extension programming for organic weed management." US Department of Agriculture CSREES Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative. $2,252,008.00. Co-Investigator.

2010 - 2010 "Building environmental public health literacy with an urban community: A pilot study." OSU Center for Clinical and Translational Science Community Engagement in Health-related Research Program. $29,994.00. Co-Investigator.

2010 - 2012 "Fire-science network and delivery system for fire-dependent ecosystems of the northern Lake States." US Fish and Wildlife Service Joint Fire Sciences. $397,827.00. Co-Investigator.

2011 - 2013 "Understanding the role of risk perception and risk attitudes in shaping public response during a wildfire." USDA Forest Service. $25,657.00. Principal Investigator.

2011 - 2015 "CNH: Co evolution of upstream human behavior and downstream ecosystem services in a changing climate." Nat Science Foundation. $1,499,995.00. Co-Investigator.