* = peer reviewed, † = at Indiana University, ^ = undergraduate student author
PRIMARY RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS
*†S Bennett, H L Reynolds. 2023. Simulated aboveground herbivory is not a source of context dependence in plant-soil feedbacks for individually-grown native and invasive woodland plants. Plant and Soil 485:133-142.
*†Houser M, B Gazley, H Reynolds, E Greenan-Browning, E Sandweiss, J Shanahan. 2022. Public support for local adaptation policy: the role of social-psychological factors, perceived climatic stimuli, and social structural characteristics. Global Environmental Change 72:10424, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102424
*†Cheng Y, J R Farmer, S L Dickinson, S M Robeson, B C Fischer and H LReynolds. 2021. Climate change impacts and urban green space adaptation efforts: Evidence from U.S. municipal parks and recreation departments. Urban Climate 39:100962; doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2021.100962
*†Oschrin EMP, HL Reynolds. 2020. Interpreting pattern in plant-soil feedback experiments with co-occurring invasive species: A graphical framework and case study. Diversity 12, 201; doi:10.3390/d12050201
*†^Bennett SI, C Howard, R Albrecht, L M Smith-Ramesh and H Reynolds. 2020. Simulated herbivory weakens plant-soil feedbacks in competitive mixtures of native and invasive woodland plants. Invited Research Topic, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 7 DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2019.00497
*†Oschrin EMP, H L Reynolds. 2019. Co-occurring invasive plant interactions do not predict the impacts of invasion in experimental tallgrass prairie communities. Biological Invasions 21(7):2417-2430
*†Whitaker B, H L Reynolds, K Clay. 2018. Fungal endophyte communities are structured by environment but not host ecotype in Panicum virgatum (Switchgrass). Ecology 99:2703-2711.
*†Bauer J T, ^N Blumenthal, A Miller, J Ferguson, H L Reynolds. 2017. Effects of between site variation in soil microbial communities and plant-soil feedbacks on the productivity and composition of plant communities. Journal of Applied Ecology 54:1028-1039.
*Bui Anh T K, Ha T H Nguyen, Minh N Nguygen, T T Tuyet-Hanh, Toan V Vu, Chuyen H Nguyen, and H L Reynolds. 2016. Accumulation and potential health risks of cadmium, lead and arsenic in vegetables grown near mining sites in Northern Vietnam. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 188:525 DOI 10.1007/s10661-016-5535-5
*†Bauer J T and H L Reynolds. 2016. Restoring native understory to a woodland invaded by Euonymus fortunei: multiple factors affect success. Restoration Ecology 24:45-52.
*†Smith L M and H L Reynolds. 2015. Euonymus fortunei dominance over native species may be facilitated by plant-soil feedback. Plant Ecology 216:1401-1406.
*†Shannon-Firestone S, H L Reynolds, R Phillips, L Flory, A Yannarell. 2015. The role of ammonium oxidizing communities in mediating effects of an invasive plant on soil nitrification. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 90:266-274.
*†Smith L M and H L Reynolds. 2015. Plant-soil feedback shifts from negative to positive with decreasing light in forest understory species. Ecology 96:2523-2532.
*†Smith L M and H L Reynolds. 2015. Extended leaf phenology, allelopathy, and inter-population variation influence invasion success of an understory forest herb. Biological Invasions 17:2299-2313.
*†Shannon S, J Bauer, ^W Anderson, and H L Reynolds. 2014. Plant-soil feedbacks between invasive shrubs and native forest understory species lead to shifts in the abundance of mycorrhizal fungi. Plant and Soil 382:317-328.
*†Mattingly W B and H L Reynolds. 2014. Soil fertility alters the nature of resource interactions in invaded grassland communities. Biological Invasions 16:2465-2478.
*†Dickson T L, G G Mittelbach, H L Reynolds and KL Gross. 2014. Height and clonality drive plant community responses to fertilization. Ecology 95:2443-2452.
*†Smith L M and H L Reynolds. 2013. Light, allelopathy, and post-mortem invasive impact on native forest understory species. Biological Invasions 16:1131-1144.
*†Brandt A J, H de Kroon, H L Reynolds and J H Burns. 2013. Soil heterogeneity generated by plant-soil feedbacks has implications for species recruitment and coexistence. Invited special feature for Journal of Ecology 101:277-286.
*†Smith A, ^M Bentley, and H L Reynolds. 2013. Wild bees visiting cucumber on Midwestern U.S. organic farms benefit from near-farm semi-natural areas. Journal of Economic Entomology 106:97-106.
*†Bauer J T, N Kleczewski, J D Bever, K Clay and H L Reynolds. 2012. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and the productivity and structure of prairie grassland communities. Oecologia 170:1089-1098.
*†Smith L M and H L Reynolds. 2012. Positive plant-soil feedback may drive dominance of a woodland invader, Euonymus fortunei. Plant Ecology 213:853-860.
*†Bauer J, S Shannon, ^R Stoops and H L Reynolds. 2012. Context dependency of the allelopathic effects of Lonicera maackii on seed germination. Plant Ecology 213:1907-1916.
*†Padilla F, W B Mattingly, B L Swedo, K Clay and H L Reynolds. 2012. Negative plant-soil feedback drives seedling competitive interactions of North American successional grassland species. Journal of Vegetation Science 23:667-676.
*†Kleczewski N M, J T Bauer, J D Bever, K Clay and H L Reynolds. 2012. A survey of endophytic fungi of switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) in the Midwest, and their putative roles in plant growth. Fungal Ecology 5:521-529.
*†Shannon S, S L Flory and H L Reynolds. 2012. Competitive context alters plant-soil feedback in an experimental woodland community. Oecologia169:236-243.
*†Eilts J A, G G Mittelbach, H L Reynolds, and K L Gross. 2011. Resource heterogeneity, soil fertility, and species diversity: impacts of clonal species on plant communities. American Naturalist 177:574-588.
This paper was featured in Nature’s Research Highlights, Ecology: Plant networks crowd neighbours. Nature 472, 393 (28 April 2011) doi:10.1038/472393d
*†Glover J D, S W Culman, S Tianna DuPont, W Broussard, L Young, M E Mangan, J G Mai, T E Crews, L R DeHaan, D H Buckley, H Ferris, R Eugene Turner, H L Reynolds and D L Wyse. 2010. Harvested perennial grasslands provide ecological benchmarks for agricultural sustainability. Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Environment 137:3-12.
*†Mattingly W B, B L Swedo and H L Reynolds. 2010. Interactive effects of resource enrichment and resident diversity on invasion of native grassland by Lolium arundinanceum. Plant Ecology 207:203-212.
*†Swedo B L, ^C Glinka, D R Rollo and H L Reynolds. 2008. Soil bacterial community structure under exotic versus native understory forbs in a woodland remnant in Indiana. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Sciences 117:7-15.
*†Houseman G R, G G Mittelbach, H L Reynolds, and K L Gross. 2008. Perturbations alter community convergence, divergence, and formation of multiple community states. Ecology 89:2172-2180.
*†Mattingly W B, R L Hewlate, and H L Reynolds. 2007. Species evenness and invasion resistance of experimental grassland communities. Oikos 116:1164-1170.
*†Reynolds H L, G G Mittelbach, T Darcy-Hall, G Houseman, and K L Gross. 2007. No effect of varying soil resource heterogeneity on plant species richness in a low fertility grassland. Journal of Ecology 95:723-733.
*†Vogelsang K M, H L Reynolds, and J D Bever. 2006. Mycorrhizal fungal identity and richness determine the species diversity and productivity of a tallgrass prairie system. New Phytologist 172:554-562.
*†Reynolds H L, K M Vogelsang, A E Hartley, J D Bever, and P A Schultz. 2006. Variable responses of old-field perennials to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and phosphorus source. Oecologia 147:348-358.
*†Reynolds H L, A E Hartley, K M Vogelsang, J D Bever, and P A Schultz. 2005. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi do not enhance nitrogen acquisition and growth of old-field perennials under low nitrogen supply in greenhouse culture. New Phytologist 167:869-880.
*†Gross K L, G G Mittelbach, and H L Reynolds. 2005. Grassland invasibility and diversity: responses to nutrients, seed input, and disturbance. Ecology 86:476-486.
*†Rajaniemi T K and H L Reynolds. 2004. Root foraging for patchy resources in eight herbaceous plant species. Oecologia 141:519-525.
*†Reynolds H L, A Packer, J D Bever, and K Clay. 2003. Grassroots ecology: plant-microbe-soil interactions as drivers of plant community structure and dynamics. Ecology 84:2281-2291.
*Mittelbach G G, C F Steiner, S M Scheiner, K L Gross, H L Reynolds, R B Waide, M R Willig, S I Dodson and L. Gough. 2001. What is the observed relationship between species richness and productivity? Ecology 82:2381-2396.
*Sinsabaugh R L, H Reynolds, T M Long. 2000. Rapid assay for amidohydrolase (urease) activity in environmental samples. Soil Biology and Biogeochemistry 32:2095-2097.
*Reynolds H L and C M D’Antonio, 1996. The ecological significance of plasticity in root weight ratio in response to nitrogen: Opinion. Plant and Soil 185:75-97.
*Reynolds H L, B A Hungate, F S Chapin III, and C M D’Antonio. 1997. Soil heterogeneity and plant competition in an annual grassland. Ecology 78:2076-2090.
*Jackson R B and H L Reynolds. 1996. Nitrate and ammonium uptake for single- and mixed-species communities grown at elevated CO2. Oecologia 105:74-80.
*Cain M L, B Kahn, J A Silander, and H L Reynolds. 1995. Genetic variability and tradeoffs among reproductive traits in white clover (Trifolium repens). Canadian Journal of Botany 73:505-511.
*Reynolds H L and S W Pacala. 1993. An analytical treatment of plant competition for soil nutrient and light. The American Naturalist 141: 51-70.
REVIEWS AND BOOK CHAPTERS
†Reynolds H L, M Houser, S Hamlin, D Habeeb, J Wilson, D Myers, G Filippelli. 2022. Built environments and green infrastructure: growing long-lasting urban resilience. In: J McCabe et al. (ed.) Climate change and resilience: Lessons for Hoosiers and beyond, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN.
†Filippelli G, D Habeeb, J Wilson, H L Reynolds. 2022. Equitability, health and resilience in the face of climate change. In: J McCabe et al. (ed.) Climate change and resilience: Lessons for Hoosiers and beyond, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN.
*†Reynolds H L, S Mincey, R D Montoya, S Hamlin, B Thapa, J Wilson, H Rosing, J Jarzen, M Grove. 2021. Green infrastructure for urban resilience: a trait-based framework. Frontiers in Ecology and Environment, doi:10.1002/fee.2446
*†Reynolds H L, L Brandt, B C Fischer, B S Hardiman, D J Moxley, E Sandweiss, J H Speer, S Fei. 2020. Implications of climate change for managing urban green infrastructure: an Indiana, US case study. Climatic Change 163:1967-1984, DOI 10.1007/s10584-019-02617-0
*†Smith-Ramesh L M and H L Reynolds. 2017. The next frontier of plant-soil feedback research: unraveling context dependence across biotic and abiotic gradients. Journal of Vegetation Science 28:484-494.
*†Reynolds H L, A A Smith, and J R Farmer. 2014. Think globally, research locally: paradigms and place in agroecological research. Invited special section for American Journal of Botany 101:1631-1639.
†Reynolds H L and K Clay. 2011. Migration as an ecological process. Environmental Law 41:371-391.
*†Reynolds H L and K A Haubensak. 2009. Soil fertility, heterogeneity and microbes: towards an integrated understanding of grassland structure and dynamics. Applied Vegetation Science 12:33-44.
*†Reynolds H L and T K Rajaniemi. 2007. Plant interactions: competition. pp. 457-480 In: Functional Plant Ecology, 2nd Edition, F I Pugnaire and F Valladares (editors), CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, Boca Raton, FL.
*Chapin F S III, E S Zavaleta, V T Eviner, R L Naylor, P M Vitousek, H L Reynolds, D U Hooper, S Lavorel, O E Sala, S E Hobbie, M C Mack, and S Diaz. 2000. Consequences of changing biodiversity. Nature 405:234-242.
*Reynolds H L. 1999. Plant interactions: competition. pp. 649-676 in Handbook of Functional Plant Ecology, F I Pugnaire and F Valladares (editors), Marcel Dekker, Inc.
*Chapin F S III, H L Reynolds, C M D'Antonio, and VM Eckhart. 1996. The functional role of species in terrestrial ecosystems. In: B Walker (ed.) Global change in terrestrial ecosystems. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
*Reynolds H L. 1996. Effects of elevated CO2 on plants grown in competition. pp. 273-286 In C Körner and F A Bazzaz (eds.) Carbon dioxide, populations, and communities. Physiological Ecology Series, Academic Press, San Diego.
*Chapin F S III, J Lubchenco, and H L Reynolds. 1995. Biodiversity effects on patterns and processes of communities and ecosystems. pp. 289-301 In Heywood, V. H. (ed.) Global Biodiversity Assessment. UNEP, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
INDEPENDENT PUBLICATIONS FROM LAB MEMBERS
*†Smith L M and S R Hall. 2016. Extended leaf phenology may drive plant invasion through direct and apparent competition. Oikos 125:839-848.
*†Smith L M. 2015. Garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata) glucosinolate content varies across a natural light gradient. Journal of Chemical Ecology 41:486-492.
*†Flory S L, Bauer J T. 2013. Experimental evidence for indirect facilitation among invasive plants. Journal of Ecology 102:12-18.
*†Smith L M. 2013. Extended leaf phenology in deciduous forest invaders: mechanisms of impact on native communities. Journal of Vegetation Science 24:979-987.
This paper was reviewed in Journal of Vegetation Science’s Commentary: Extended leaf phenology: a secret of successful invaders? Journal of Vegetation Science 24:975-976.
*†Bauer J T. 2012. Invasive species: “back-seat drivers” of ecosystem change? Biological Invasions 14:1295-1304.
*†Bauer J T and S L Flory. 2011. Suppression of the woodland herb Senna hebecarpa by the invasive grass Microstegium vimineum. The American Midland Naturalist 165:105-115.
*†Rajaniemi, T K. 2007. Root foraging traits and competitive ability in heterogeneous soils. Oecologia 153:145-152.
This research was funded by NSF DEB-0129493 to T K Rajaniemi and H L Reynolds
TEACHING PUBLICATIONS
*†Reynolds H L and K D Kearns. 2016. A planning tool for incorporating backward design, active learning, and authentic assessment in the college classroom. College Teaching 65(1):17-27.
*†Knackmuchs E, J F Farmer and H L Reynolds. 2016. Student outcomes of eco-restoration service-learning experiences in urban woodlands. Journal of Experimental Education 40(1):24-38.
*†Reynolds H L. 2015. The city as ecosystem: service learning to promote knowledge, skills, and values in a non-majors environmental science course. In: The course reflection project: faculty reflections on teaching service-learning. Information Age Publishing, Charlotte, NC.
*†Reynolds H L, E S Brondizio, and J Meta Robinson, with D Karpa, B L Gross (eds.). 2010. Teaching environmental literacy: across campus and across the curriculum. IU Press, Bloomington, IN.
Reynolds H L, E S Brondizio, J Meta Robinson, D Karpa, and B L Gross. 2010. Introduction: the rationale for teaching environmental literacy in higher education. pp. xiii-xviii In: Teaching environmental literacy: across campus and across the curriculum. IU Press, Bloomington, IN.
Robinson J Meta and H L Reynolds. 2010. A model for grassroots, multidisciplinary faculty inquiry. pp. 1-14 In: Teaching environmental literacy: across campus and across the curriculum. IU Press, Bloomington, IN.
Reynolds H L. 2010. Overview: Core learning goals for campus-wide environmental literacy. pp. 17-27 In: Teaching environmental literacy: across campus and across the curriculum. IU Press, Bloomington, IN.
Schlegel W, H L Reynolds, V M Getty, D Henshel, and J W Reidhaar. 2010. Food for thought: a multidisciplinary faculty grassroots initiative for sustainability and service-learning. pp. 183-191 In: Teaching environmental literacy: across campus and across the curriculum. IU Press, Bloomington, IN.
†Reynolds H L. 2004. Course Portfolio: The City as Ecosystem, E105. Peer Review of Teaching Project. http://www.unl.edu/peerrev/examples.html
INDEPENDENT TEACHING PUBLICATIONS FROM LAB MEMBERS
*†Shannon S and B Winterman. 2012. Student comprehension of primary literature is aided by companion assignments emphasizing pattern recognition and information literacy. Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship (http://istl.library.ucsb.edu/12-winter/refereed3.html)
SERVICE PUBLICATIONS/PRODUCTS
Reynolds H L, S K Mincey, J Wilson, D Habeeb, H Gregory, S Hamlin, B Thapa, S Freeman-Day, C McGill. 2021. Indiana Green City Mapper. ArcGIS Online Spatial Data Portal. Access at: https://indiana-green-city-mapper-iu.hub.arcgis.com
Houser M, E Sandweiss, B Gazley, E Grennan Browning, H Reynolds. 2020. The Hoosier Life Survey. Assessing Hoosier Preparedness for Environmental change, Extreme Weather, and Other Risks. Environmental Resilience Institute, Indiana University.
Reynolds H, L Brandt, M Widhalm, S Fei, B Fischer B, B Hardiman, D Moxley, E Sandweiss, J Speer, and J S Dukes. 2018. Maintaining Indiana’s Urban Green Spaces: A Report from the Indiana Climate Change Impacts Assessment. Purdue Climate Change Research Center, Purdue University. West Lafayette, Indiana.
Bennett S, Reynolds H and E Jacquart. 2018. Native Woodland Plants: Beautiful Options for Your Land that Support Native Birds! Educational Pamphlet. Access at: https://sustain.iu.edu/buwp.html
Jacquart E, Appold, M M, Gorden, D, Holeman, M M and H L Reynolds. 2017. Why Should We Care About Pollinators? Pollinator Habitat BMP Committee of the Indiana Pesticide Review Board.
Reynolds H L and ^Z Need. 2016. Native Woodland Plants: Beautiful Options for Your Land that Won’t Be Breakfast for Bunnies or Dinner for Deer. Educational Pamphlet. Access at: https://sustain.iu.edu/buwp.html
^Wells N, J Capshew and H L Reynolds. 2011. Dunn’s Woods. Conserving Our Natural and Cultural History. Educational Pamphlet. Access at: https://sustain.iu.edu/buwp
Reynolds H L. Interviewee and contributor. 2011. Dunn's Woods. Documentary film short. Access at: https://sustain.iu.edu/buwp.html
US DOE and USDA. 2009. Sustainability of Biofuels: Future Research Opportunities; Report from the October 2008 Workshop, DOE/SC-0114, U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science and U.S. Department of Agriculture. Access at: https://genomicscience.energy.gov/biofuels/sustainability/
Reynolds H L. 2007. Careful use of land preserves “green infrastructure”. Shalom Community Center Safety ~ Net 3:7.