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Vernon Orlando Bailey

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Nationality
  
USA

Name
  
Vernon Bailey

Fields
  
Mammalogy


Vernon Orlando Bailey wwwpwrcusgsgovresshowperrybiosBaileyVernonjpg

Institutions
  
United States Department of Agriculture

Known for
  
Research on animal trapping, beavers, rodents, coyotes, wolves, bobcats

Died
  
1942, Washington, D.C., United States

Institution
  
United States Department of Agriculture

Books
  
Animal life of Yellowsto, Beaver Habits and Experime, Management by Degrees, Mammals of the Southwes

Vernon Orlando Bailey (1864–1942) was an American naturalist who specialized in mammalogy. He was employed by the Bureau of Biological Survey, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). His contributions to the Bureau of Biological Survey numbered roughly 13,000 specimens including many new species. Bailey published 244 monographs and articles during his career with the USDA, and is best known for his biological surveys of Texas, New Mexico, North Dakota, and Oregon.

Contents

Life and work

The fourth child of Emily and Hiram Bailey, Vernon Orlando Bailey was born on June 21, 1864 in Manchester, Michigan. Hiram Bailey was a woodsman and a mason by trade. Bailey and his pioneer family moved by horse-drawn wagon to Elk River, Minnesota in 1870. Since there were no school in the frontier town at the time, the Baileys schooled their children at home until they and several other local families established a school in 1873. Hiram Bailey was a woodsman and hunter and taught his son how to hunt at an early age. Bailey began collecting specimens and forwarding them to Dr. C. Hart Merriam, founder of the Bureau of Biological Survey (the predecessor to the current U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service). Bailey was appointed special field agent to the Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy in 1887. By 1890, Bailey was awarded the title of Chief Field Naturalist. He served in this position until his retirement in 1933. He was the president of the American Society of Mammalogists from 1933 to 1934. In 1899, he married ornithologist Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey. The two traveled the United States together and separately collecting and observing specimens in the field. They co-authored several articles including "Cave life of Kentucky" with Leonard Giovannoli, published in the September 1933 edition of American Midland Naturalist (Vol. 14, No. 5).

Legacy

Vernon Bailey Peak is a 6670 ft (2033 m) peak in Big Bend National Park in Texas.

Publications

  • The Prairie Ground Squirrels or Spermophiles of the Mississippi Valley, 1893
  • A New Subspecies of Beaver from North Dakota, 1919-1920
  • Beaver Habits, Beaver Control and Possibilities of Beaver Farming, 1922
  • The Cave Life of Kentucky, American Midland Naturalist, 1933
  • Associated eponyms

  • Chrysothamnus baileyi Woot. & Standl.
  • Ostrya baileyi Rose (Ostrya baileyi is a synonym for Ostrya knowltonii.)
  • Tillandsia baileyi Rose ex Small
  • Echinocereus baileyi Rose (This is now classified as a subspecies of Echinocereus reichenbachii.)
  • Sarcobatus baileyi Coville.
  • Yucca baileyi Woot. & Standl.
  • Campanula baileyi Eastwood. (Campanula baileyi is a synonym for Campanula wilkinsiana.)
  • Crotaphytus collaris baileyi Stejneger, 1890 (This population is no longer considered a separate subspecies.)
  • Canis lupus baileyi (Mexican wolf)
  • References

    Vernon Orlando Bailey Wikipedia


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