|
|
|
|
John M. Barnes Student Travel Award
Colleagues and friends have established this award in honor of Dr.
Barnes for the contributions that he has made to the science of plant
pathology through his research and service.
|

John Barnes
|
John M Barnes, retired in 1997 from national Program Leader in Plant
Pathology in the Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension
Service (CSREES) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Born in
Washington, D.C. on April 22, 1931, he earned the B.S. degree at the
University of Maryland in the Botany Department, majoring in Plant
Pathology. He obtained the M.S. and Ph.D. Degrees at Cornell University
under Dr. Carol Boothroyd. His Doctorate research was completed in 1960,
and uncovered previously undefined biochemical mechanisms of stalk rot
resistance and susceptibility in maize.
His initial professional experience was in operations research on crop
vulnerability and energy systems at Johns Hopkins University Operations
Research Office (later Research Analysis Corporation) in Bethesda,
Maryland. In 1963, he joined Resources Research, Inc. of Washington, D.C.
where he conducted various pollution-related studies, as well as the
NASA-funded Gulliver project for detection of life on the planet Mars. His
Gulliver studies contributed to the feasibility of Carbon-14 tagging in
detection of extraterrestrial metabolism.
In 1967, he joined the then-named Cooperative State Research Service (CSRS)
of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C. as Plant
Pathologist. He worked initially under the tuteledge of the legendary Dr.
John Fulkerson, gaining insights on the evaluation of biological research
and the "network of excellence" concept espoused by Fulkerson.
It was not very long after joining CSRS that Dr. Barnes was thrust into
the middle of southern corn leaf blight (SCLB) epidemic of 1970. He led
the establishment of an emergency, Special Research Grants program on SCLB,
focused on buttressing Land-Grant university research on the problem and
in late 1970, he was appointed to head up the Corn Blight Information
Center. In 1972, he was awarded the departmental Award of Merit for his
leadership in the SCLB arena.
Throughout his career of service to science, Dr. Barnes applied the
"network of excellence" philosophy in collaborating with the
university and Federal scientists to obtain funding for a variety of
special research grant programs and environmental monitoring networks.
These efforts resulted in formation of a national mycotoxin information
database, a nematode culture collections network, a national microbial
germplasm network, and a university-Federal-industry ultraviolet-B
terrestrial monitoring program. He also applied the "network"
philosophy to organizing peer panels for reviews of scores of plant
pathology and related departments in Land-Grant Universities. Dr. Barnes
also helped organize and obtain funding for several national and
international conferences assessing the state-of-science, as well as the
array of potential solutions, to a wide variety of plant disease problems.
In 1957-1977, he served as USDA Pesticide Coordinator in the Office of the
Secretary of Agriculture. Following his return to CSRS, Dr. Barnes
participated in non-agriculture conferences on interdisciplinary training
and research. With this exposure to the challenges of interdisciplinary in
the early 1980's, he engaged plant science professional society leaders
and USDA sister research agencies in debate on a plant health care
concept, but a process that contributed to reduced insularity of
agriculture discipline science in Federal laboratories and university
departments. For leadership here, Barnes was awarded a departmental Award
of Merit in 1985.
In this phase of his career, he also took over the planning and management
of the funding for a national "acid rain" research and
monitoring network, established a few years earlier by Dr. Fulkerson and
other colleagues. This national program evolved into the world's largest
atmosphere deposition monitoring program, measuring not only acidic
deposition, but also other chemical species deposited in precipitation.
Through the efforts of the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program
(NAPAP) administered from the office of the President of the U.S., there
arose broad agreement in the need for more substantial research on this
environmental problem. Dr. Barnes collaborated with NAPAP and others to
initiate a CSRS special agricultural research grants program on acidic
precipitation. During this program's six years, significant new findings
of importance to decision makers were made. For his leadership in
establishing and managing this program, he was presented a departmental
Award of Merit in 1988. In 1991, he was appointed to temporary assignment
as Senior Scientist in the NAPAP Office of the Director, in the Executive
Office of the President, evaluating research on acidic deposition
biological impacts, as well as deposition monitoring results. His
assignment was extended to 1993, when he returned to his parent Agency,
newly reorganized and renamed Cooperative State Research, Education, and
Extension Service.
Throughout his three decades of service, Dr. Barnes served as a strong
advocate for plant pathology, nematology, and virology at all levels of
science and government. For several years, he represented APS as
Corresponding Science Societies Representative to the National Academy of
Sciences and its National Research Council's Commission on Life Sciences.
He drew upon diverse databases to analyze funding patterns and describe
research opportunities. He wrote Phytopathology and Journal of Nematology
papers on these topics, and also made presentations on his findings at
Society annual meetings. He served on the APS Sustaining Associated
Committee, and for most of his career was advisor to APS Council and the
APS Department Heads Committee. He continued work on research needs for
combatting plant diseases and air quality problems until his retirement in
1997. He resides with his wife, Pauline, in suburban Montgomery County,
Maryland.
|