Bain, Mark Brian

Associate Professor
Understanding how systems form and behave is a fundamental pursuit at the frontier of many scientific disciplines covering both the natural and human worlds. Limitations are increasingly evident in the traditional reductionist approach to science: that is, breaking systems apart and studying the component parts in order to figure out how the system works as a whole. Much of what we know about nature is a product of this approach, but current system oriented management and knowledge gaps demand more. To truly understand ecological systems, or others such as economic and social systems, will require a different kind of science and a different way of thinking. Ecosystem science, and the larger specialty of complexity, are just beginning to emerge as prominent pursuits for this generation of researchers. Emergent properties, phase transitions, criticality, stable states, nonlinear relations, and other related concepts are developing from scattered advancements in a variety of fields. Applying such concepts to environmental systems is just beginning through pioneering research of a relatively few scientists. Mark Bain has put a particular focus on his systems research approach: integrating hydrology and aquatic ecology as a major organizing dimension in aquatic ecosystems. This pursuit, sometimes called hydroecology or biohydrology, lacks principles or methods but it is increasingly seen as a promising area for advancing understanding and the development of management approaches.

research

research and scholarship focus

His specialties are fish and macroinvertebrates in lakes, streams and estuaries. Statistics, modeling, and biological assessment are heavily used in most research and teaching. His current research is testing complex systems theory in bay and lagoon ecosystems around Lake Ontario, describing the behavior and ecology of sturgeon, planning ecosystem restoration and conservation, and assessing impacts to the Hudson River caused by the World Trade Center destruction.

research areas

affiliations

faculty appointment in

member of graduate field

teaching

teaching focus

Systems theory provides principles for addressing ecosystems and a large scientific literature documents practices and efforts to understand and change ecosystems. The two perspectives are be developed in a course to investigate ecosystems as units of management and study.

background

educational background

  • Ph.D, University of Massachusetts, Amherst (1985)
  • M.Sc., Virginia Polytechnical Institute & State University (1980)
  • B.S., West Virginia University (1977)

professional background

  • Environmental policy experience includes endangered species protection, energy-environment conflicts, watershed management, and international conservation.

publications

selected publications (listing in progress)

  • Bain, M. B., and M. S Meixler. 2008. Defining a target fish community for river restoration. River Research and Applications. In Press.

     

  • Bain, M. B. 2008. Designing environmental restoration mega-projects: New York's waterways. Chapter in Restoria (M. Hall, editor), Cambridge Unversity Press, UK. In press.

     

  • Bain, M., N. Haley, D. Peterson, K. Arend, K. Mills, and P. Sullivan. 2007. Recovery of a US endangered fish. PLoS ONE 2(1): e168

     

  • Sarkar, U.K., and M.B. Bain. 2007. Priority habitats for the conservation of large river fishes in the Ganges River basin. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems. 17(4):349-359.

     

  • Bain, M., J. Lodge, D.J. Suszkowski, D. Botkin, A. Brash, C. Craft, R. Diaz, K. Farley, Y. Geleb, J.S. Levinton, W Matuszeski, F. Steimle and P. Wilber. 2007. Target ecosystem characteristics for the Hudson Raritan Estuary: Technical guidance for developing a comprehensive ecosystem restoration plan. Hudson River Foundation, New York, NY. 106 pp.

     

  • Bain, M. B. 2005. Defining ecosystems targets for promoting environmental sustainability in water resource management. Pages 138-149 in C. Guodong et al. (editors). Proceedings of the International Symposium on Sustainable Water Resources Management and Oasis-hydrosphere-Desert Interactions in Arid Regions, Tsinghua University, Beijing.

     

  • Bain, M. B. 2005. Restoring native riverine fishes with enhanced flow regimes. Pages 15-20 In M.J. Brouder, C.L. Springer and S. Leon, editors. The lower Colorado River: Restoring natural function and native fish within a modified riverine environment. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Albuquerque. NM.

     

  • Bain. M. B. and the OGGI research team. 2005. The Olympic Games global impact study: NYC 2012 candidate city. NYC2012, Inc., New York, NY 30 pages.

     

  • Lillehammer, L., T. Kleven, T. Hagen, M. Bain and D. Lewis. 2005. Developing sustainability priorities with a participatory process: Lake Victoria Basin, East Africa. Proceedings of the International Conference on Headwater Control VI: Hydrology, Ecology and Water Resources in Headwaters. Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate, Bergen, NO. Paper # 24. 11 pages.
Keywords: aquatic ecology, aquatic systems, ecosystems, environmental policy, fish, great lakes, impact assessment, invertebrates, modeling, new york city