James K. Agee

James K. Agee is a forest ecologist at the University of Washington who has
specialized in fire ecology and the challenges of restoring fire to western
ecosystems. He has a Ph.D. in Wildland Resource Science from the University
of California, Berkeley (1973) and worked as a forest ecologist for the National
Park Service in San Francisco (1974-78) and as Biology Program Leader for its
Cooperative Park Studies Unit at the University of Washington, Seattle (1978-88).
In 1988, he became Chair of the Forest Resources Management Division, College
of Forest Resources, University of Washington, and continues there as Professor
of Forest Ecology.
He has served as a trustee for The Nature Conservancy, Chair of the Washington
Natural Heritage Council, Keep Washington Green, and has served on the Oregon
Science Team on Eastside Forest Restoration, the National Academy of Sciences
Committee on Sustainability and Future of Non-Federal Forests, member of
the second Committee of Scientists evaluating planning regulations for the
National Forest Management Act, the University of California Committee on
Cumulative Effects of Timber Harvest, and on the Skagit Environmental Endowment
Commission. He has served as associate editor for Northwest Science and Ecological
Applications. In 1998, he was awarded Outstanding Scientist by the Northwest
Scientific Association.
Dr. Agee is widely known for his work in forest and fire ecology. He has
over 175 publications, including 1993’s Fire Ecology of Pacific Northwest
Forests (Island Press). His current projects include effects of thinning
and prescribed fire in eastern Washington forests, landscape effects of fuel
treatments, effects of seasonal burning on ponderosa pine, and remote sensing
applications for crown fire characteristics.