Information About Vernon Orlando Bailey - Search

Information About Vernon Orlando Bailey - Search


Search result for Vernon_Orlando_Bailey
You can get detailed information about everything you are looking for

You can take advantage of various useful links related to the word Vernon Orlando Bailey


Search and download songs that match the word Vernon Orlando Bailey


For the word Vernon Orlando Bailey see helpful links


View and download images that match the word Vernon Orlando Bailey


Search and read articles that match the word Vernon Orlando Bailey


Read article on the word Vernon Orlando Bailey on Wikipedia


Vernon Orlando Bailey related search and read news


Watch and download movies that matches the word Vernon Orlando Bailey


watch and download dramas that matches the word Vernon Orlando Bailey



We try to help you find anything that matches the word Vernon Orlando Bailey. If you can’t find what you’re looking for here, please go to the home page. Our website is updated every day, with new songs, videos, pictures, movies, serials, interesting news, etc. every day. is added. Most importantly, you can download the safest Whatsapp Plus program from our site. If we haven’t found anything that matches your search for Vernon Orlando Bailey, we’ll post it for you soon.
Thank you for choosing us!

In addition, you can benefit from the useful links shared

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).[1] 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.

Vernon Orlando Bailey
Born1864
Died1942
NationalityAmerican
Known forResearch on animal trapping, beavers, rodents, coyotes, wolves, bobcats
Scientific career
FieldsMammalogy
InstitutionsUnited States Department of Agriculture

Life and work edit

 
Photograph taken for Vernon Orlando Bailey during his work as field naturalist for the United States Department of Agriculture Bureau of Biological Survey. Bailey was particularly interested in creating more humane animal traps and devoted much of his time after retirement to this cause.

The fourth child of Emily and Hiram Bailey, Vernon Orlando Bailey was born on June 21, 1864, in Manchester, Michigan. Bailey and his pioneer family moved by horse-drawn wagon to Elk River, Minnesota, in 1870. Hiram Bailey was a woodsman and a mason by trade who taught his son how to hunt at an early age. Since there was 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. Vernon briefly attended the University of Michigan and later Columbian University. While in Elk River, 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, which he also helped found in 1919.[2]

During his career, his fieldwork focused on collecting and describing mammals, but also included birds reptiles and plants. His efforts provided the bureau some 13,000 mammal specimens.[3] In 1899, he married ornithologist Florence Augusta Merriam. 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 edit

Vernon Bailey Peak is a 6670 ft (2033 m) peak in Big Bend National Park in Texas.[4]

Publications edit

Associated eponyms edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Vernon Orlando Bailey". United States Forest Service.
  2. ^ Biographies of ASM Presidents, American Society of Mammalogists
  3. ^ Chapman, Brian R.; Bolen, Eric G. (2018). The Natural History of Texas. College Station, TX: Texas A&M Press. ISBN 978-1-62349-572-5.
  4. ^ "Vernon Bailey Peak". www.summitpost.org. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  5. ^ "Chrysothamnus baileyi Wooton & Standley". Contrib. U.S. Natl. Herb. 16: 181. 1913.
  6. ^ "Ostrya baileyi Rose". Contrib. U.S. Natl. Herb. 8: 293. 1905.
  7. ^ Ostrya knowltonii
  8. ^ "9. Tillandsia Baileyi Rose". Flora of the Southeastern United States. 246: 1328. 1913.
  9. ^ "Echinocereus baileyi, a new cactus from Oklahoma". Contrib. U.S. Natl. Herb. 12: 403. 1909.
  10. ^ "Sarcobatus baileyi ". Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 7: 77. 1892.
  11. ^ Mozingo, Hugh Nelson (1987). "Greasewood, S. baileyi". Shrubs of the Great Basin: A Natural History. University of Nevada Press. p. 84. ISBN 9780874171129.
  12. ^ "Yucca baileyi Wooton & Standley". Contrib. U.S. Natl. Herb. 16: 181. 1913.
  13. ^ "New Western Plants, Part II. Two New Species of Campanula from the Pacific Coast". Bull. Torrey Bot. Club. 29: 525. 1902.
  14. ^ Campanula baileyi Eastw. — The Plant List
  15. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Bailey, V.O.", p. 14).

External links edit


42 people on site
Top.Mail.Ru
©Tatli.Biz 2010-2024