Publications

* Student researcher

#Authors contributed equally

21. J.M. Dybiec*, T. Ledford*, S. Rinehart, C. Tatariw, B. Mortazavi, and J. A. Cherry. 2024. A metric-based indicator of functional recovery for salt marshes in the Gulf of Mexico. Journal of Applied Ecology. Accepted.

20. E. Fromenthal*, J.M. Dybiec*, S. Rinehart, and J.A. Cherry. 2024. Variation in insect community structure between natural and constructed tidal marshes. Ecological Entomology [PDF]

19. S. Rinehart, J.M. Dybiec*, J.B. Walker, L. Simpson, and J.A. Cherry. 2024. Effects of burrowing crabs on coastal sediments and their functions: a systematic meta-analysis. Ecosphere 15(1): e4927 [PDF]

18. S. Rinehart#, J.M. Dybiec#*, P. Richardson#*, J.B. Walker#, J.D. Peabody, and J.A. Cherry. 2024. Researcher effects on the biological structure and edaphic conditions of field sites and implications for management. Ecosphere 15(1): e4750 [PDF]

17. J.M. Dybiec*, M.C. Sharbaugh*, S. Rinehart, and J. A. Cherry. 2023. Seasonal sediment dynamics in a constructed and natural tidal marsh in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Wetlands 43(70). doi.org/10.1007/s13157-023-01719-x. [PDF]

16. S. Rinehart, J. M. Dybiec*, E. Fromenthal*, T. Ledford*, B. Mortazavi, and J. A. Cherry. 2023. Recovery of planktonic invertebrate communities in restored and created coastal wetlands along the northern Gulf of Mexico. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 291: 108417. doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2023.108417[PDF]

15. S. Rinehart, J. M. Dybiec*, B. Mortazavi, and J. A. Cherry. 2023. Stratified vertical sediment profiles increase burrowing crab effects on salt marsh edaphic conditions. Ecosphere 14(3): e4431. doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4431 [PDF]

14. S. Rinehart and D. Hawlena. 2022. Top down effects on biological soil crust function. Soil Biology and Biogeochemistry 173: 108804. doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2022.108804 [PDF]

13. J.B. Walker#, S. Rinehart#, G. Greenberg-Pines*#, W. White*, R. DeSantiago*, D. Lipson, and J.D. Long. 2022. Aboveground competition drives density-dependent effects of cordgrass on sediment biogeochemistry. Ecology and Evolution 12(3): e8722. doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8722 [PDF]

12. S. Rinehart and J.D. Long. 2022. Population responses of omnivorous arthropods to plant alternative resources suppress prey populations: a meta-analysis. Ecology 103(5): e3626. doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3623 [PDF]

11. S. Rinehart#, N.D. Shamir Weller*#, and D. Hawlena. 2022. Snail mucus increases the CO2 efflux of biological soil crusts. Ecosystems 25: 537-547. doi.org/10.1007/s10021-021-00670-4 [PDF]

10. J.B. Walker, S. Rinehart, W. White*, E.D. Grosholz, and J.D. Long. 2021. Local and regional variation in effects of burrowing crabs on plant community structure. Ecology 102(2): e03244. [PDF]

9. M. Zaguri*, S. Kandel*, S. Rinehart, V.R. Torsekar, and D. Hawlena. 2021. Protein quantification in ecological studies: a literature review and empirical comparisons of standard methodologies. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 12: 1240-1251. [PDF]

8. S. Rinehart and D. Hawlena. 2020. The effects of predation risk on prey stoichiometry: a meta-analysis. Ecology 101(7): e03037. [PDF]

7. E. Sperfeld, J.P. Nilssen, S. Rinehart, K. Schwenk, and D.O. Hessen. 2020. Ecology of predator-induced morphological defense traits in Daphnia longispina (Cladocera, Arthropoda). Oecologia 192: 687-698. [PDF]

6. S. Rinehart and J.D. Long. 2019. Conspecifics, not pollen, reduce omnivore prey consumption. PLoS ONE 14(8): e0215264. [PDF]

5. S. Rinehart and J.D. Long. 2018. Habitat use is linked to resource-specific performance of an ecologically important marsh predator. Ecosphere 9(5): e02273. [PDF]

4. S. Rinehart, S.C. Schroeter, and J.D. Long. 2017. Denisty-mediated indirect effects from active predators and narrow habitat domain prey. Ecology 98(10): 2653-2661. [PDF]

3. L.A. Meyerson, J.T. Cronin, G.P. Bhattarai, H. Brix, C. Lambertini, M. Lucanova, S. Rinehart, J. Suda, and P. Pysek. 2016. Do ploidy level and nuclear genome size and latitude of origin modify the expression of Phragmites australis traits and interactions with herbivores? Biological Invasions 18(9): 2531-2549. [PDF]

2. A. Oczkowski, C. Thornber, E.E. Markham, R. Rossi, A. Ziegler*, and S. Rinehart. 2015. Testing sample stability using four storage methods and the macroalgae Ulva and Gracilaria. Limnology and Oceanography: Methods 13(1): 9-14. [PDF]

1. S. Rinehart, M. Guidone, A. Ziegler*, T. Schollmeier*, and C. Thornber. 2014. Overwintering strategies of bloom-forming Ulva species in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, USA. Botanica Marina 57(4): 337-341. [PDF]