Charles Fuller Baker (March 22, 1872, Lansing, Michigan – July 22, 1927, Manila) was an American entomologist, botanist, agronomist and plant collector.
He then worked with the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station at Fort Collins especially researching the Hemiptera.
[1] In 1903 he received an MS from Stanford University and then taught at Pomona College and during this time worked on the Invertebrata Pacifica series.
He worked in Santiago de las Vegas, Cuba from 1904 to 1907 at the agronomy research station there and then briefly at Para in Brazil.
[2] His collections of fungi were destroyed during the Japanese invasion of the Philippines during World War II.