Norman Harris
Associate Professor of Range Management
Contact Details:
Phone: (907) 746-2677
Fax: (907) 746-2677
Location: Palmer
E-Mail
Curriculum Vitae:
B.S., 1992, Oregon State University
M.S., 1998, Oregon State University
PhD, 2001, Oregon State University
Courses:
GIS A370/NRM394 - Remote Sensing for Natural Resources
NRM312 - Introduction to Range Management
Research Interests: Animal Distribution Patterns, Ecosystem Monitoring, Stream Morphology, Time Change Analysis, Vegetation Growth and Phenology, Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and Global Positioning Systems
Current Research Programs:
1) Livestock distribution in grazed watershed
2) Air temperature patterns on the landscape
3) Near-earth remote sensing of vegetation patterns
Examples of Research Support:
"An Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Livestock Distribution Practices in Grazed Watersheds", USDA Initiative for Future Agriculture and Food Systems (multistate project), $1,200,000 (total over four years), 2000-present
"Spatially Modeling the Distribution of Beef Cattle and Reindeer on Ranges at High Latitudes in Alaska", USDA Hatch, $47,389, 2003-present
Examples of Publications:
Harris, N.R., S.H. Sharrow, and D.E. Johnson. 1996. Use of Low-Level Remote Sensing to Understand Tree/Forage Spatial Interactions in Agroforests. Geocarto International 11:81-92
Harris, N.R., D.E. Johnson, M.R. George, and N.K. McDougald. 2002. The Effect of Topography, Vegetation, and Weather on Cattle Distribution at the San Joaquin Experimental Range, California. In: Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Oak Woodlands: Oaks in California's Changing Landscape, San Diego, CA., October 22-25, 2001
Marris, N.R., W.E. Frost, N.K. McDougald, M.R. George, and D.L. Nielsen. 2002. Long-term Residual Dry Matter Mapping for Monitoring California Hardwood Rangelands. In: Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Oak Woodlands: Oaks in California's Changing Landscape, San Diego, CA., October 22-25, 2001
Phone: (907) 746-2677
Fax: (907) 746-2677
Location: Palmer
Curriculum Vitae:
B.S., 1992, Oregon State University
M.S., 1998, Oregon State University
PhD, 2001, Oregon State University
Courses:
GIS A370/NRM394 - Remote Sensing for Natural Resources
NRM312 - Introduction to Range Management
Research Interests: Animal Distribution Patterns, Ecosystem Monitoring, Stream Morphology, Time Change Analysis, Vegetation Growth and Phenology, Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and Global Positioning Systems
Current Research Programs:
1) Livestock distribution in grazed watershed
2) Air temperature patterns on the landscape
3) Near-earth remote sensing of vegetation patterns
Examples of Research Support:
"An Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Livestock Distribution Practices in Grazed Watersheds", USDA Initiative for Future Agriculture and Food Systems (multistate project), $1,200,000 (total over four years), 2000-present
"Spatially Modeling the Distribution of Beef Cattle and Reindeer on Ranges at High Latitudes in Alaska", USDA Hatch, $47,389, 2003-present
Examples of Publications:
Harris, N.R., S.H. Sharrow, and D.E. Johnson. 1996. Use of Low-Level Remote Sensing to Understand Tree/Forage Spatial Interactions in Agroforests. Geocarto International 11:81-92
Harris, N.R., D.E. Johnson, M.R. George, and N.K. McDougald. 2002. The Effect of Topography, Vegetation, and Weather on Cattle Distribution at the San Joaquin Experimental Range, California. In: Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Oak Woodlands: Oaks in California's Changing Landscape, San Diego, CA., October 22-25, 2001
Marris, N.R., W.E. Frost, N.K. McDougald, M.R. George, and D.L. Nielsen. 2002. Long-term Residual Dry Matter Mapping for Monitoring California Hardwood Rangelands. In: Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Oak Woodlands: Oaks in California's Changing Landscape, San Diego, CA., October 22-25, 2001



