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Joel Baker, Ph.D.

Director
Office
Center for Urban Waters (CUW) 312
Phone Number
Office Hours
Campus Mailbox
358438

About

Degrees

Ph.D.
Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of Minnesota
1988
M.S.
Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of Minnesota
1985
B.S.
Environmental Chemistry
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
1982

Introduction

Professor Joel Baker holds the Port of Tacoma Chair in Environmental Science and is the Science Director of the Center for Urban Waters. He earned a B.S. degree in Environmental Chemistry from SUNY Syracuse (1982) and M.S. (1985) and Ph.D. (1988) degrees in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the University of Minnesota.

Scholarly Interests

Dr. Baker's research interests center about the transport of organic contaminants in the environment, specifically atmospheric transport and deposition, aerosol chemistry, the dynamics of contaminant transport in estuaries, and modeling the exposure and transfer of bioaccumulative chemicals in aquatic food webs. He teaches courses in water quality modeling, environmental chemistry, and quantitative methods.

Affiliations

He has co-authored over ninety papers on contaminant cycling in the Great Lakes, the Chesapeake Bay and coastal waters, and edited Atmospheric Deposition of Contaminants to the Great Lakes and Coastal Waters (SETAC Press, 1997). He was the lead author on a scientific review of PCBs in the Hudson River, a contributing author to the Pew Oceans Commission report Marine Pollution in the United States, and a member of the NRC's Committee on Oil in the Sea, chaired the New York Harbor Model Evaluation Group, advised the European Commission on water quality modeling, and served on the Board of Directors of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. Dr. Baker is a member of the Puget Sound Partnership Science Panel, which he chaired from 2007-2009.

Selected Publications

Klosterhaus*, S.L., Dries, E. and J.E. Baker (2011) Bioaccumulation kinetics of polybrominated diphenyl ethers from estuarine sediments to the marine polychaete, Nereis virens. Environ. Toxicol. Chem., 30(5), 1204-1212. Publication Date: 2011

Jiang, J.J, C.L. Lee, M.D. Fang, F.C. Ko, and J.E. Baker (2011) Polybrominated diphenyl ethers and polychlorinated biphenyls in sediments of southwest Taiwan: regional characteristics and potential sources. Marine Pollut. Bull., 62, 815-823. Publication Date: 2011

Klosterhaus*, S.L. and J.E. Baker (2010) Bioavailability of decabromodiphenyl ether to the marine polychaete Nereis virens., Environ. Toxicol. Chem., 29(4), 860-868. Publication Date: 2010