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Liam Heneghan
Liam Heneghan
Professor of Environmental Science, DePaul University
Verified email at depaul.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Earthworm invasion into previously earthworm-free temperate and boreal forests
LE Frelich, CM Hale, PB Reich, AR Holdsworth, S Scheu, L Heneghan, ...
Biological invasions belowground: earthworms as invasive species, 35-45, 2006
4182006
Integrating soil ecological knowledge into restoration management
L Heneghan, SP Miller, S Baer, MA Callaham Jr, J Montgomery, ...
Restoration ecology 16 (4), 608-617, 2008
3082008
Soil microarthropod contributions to decomposition dynamics: tropical–temperate comparisons of a single substrate
L Heneghan, DC Coleman, X Zou, DA Crossley Jr, BL Haines
Ecology 80 (6), 1873-1882, 1999
2621999
The invasive shrub European buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica, L.) alters soil properties in Midwestern US woodlands
L Heneghan, F Fatemi, L Umek, K Grady, K Fagen, M Workman
Applied Soil Ecology 32 (1), 142-148, 2006
1672006
The influence of invasive earthworms on indigenous fauna in ecosystems previously uninhabited by earthworms
S Migge-Kleian, MA McLean, JC Maerz, L Heneghan
Biological Invasions 8, 1275-1285, 2006
1572006
Soil microarthropod community structure and litter decomposition dynamics: a study of tropical and temperate sites
L Heneghan, DC Coleman, X Zou, DA Crossley Jr, BL Haines
Applied Soil Ecology 9 (1-3), 33-38, 1998
1451998
Interactions of an introduced shrub and introduced earthworms in an Illinois urban woodland: impact on leaf litter decomposition
L Heneghan, J Steffen, K Fagen
Pedobiologia 50 (6), 543-551, 2007
1282007
Policy and management responses to earthworm invasions in North America
MA Callaham, G González, CM Hale, L Heneghan, SL Lachnicht, X Zou
Biological invasions belowground: earthworms as invasive species, 117-129, 2006
1032006
Rapid decomposition of buckthorn litter may change soil nutrient levels
L Heneghan, C Clay, C Brundage
Ecological Restoration 20 (2), 108-111, 2002
752002
A striking profile: soil ecological knowledge in restoration management and science
MA Callaham Jr, CC Rhoades, L Heneghan
Restoration Ecology 16 (4), 604-607, 2008
732008
European buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica) and its effects on some ecosystem properties in an urban woodland
L Heneghan, C Rauschenberg, F Fatemi, M Workman
Ecological Restoration 22 (4), 275-280, 2004
712004
Soil microarthropod contribution to forest ecosystem processes: the importance of observational scale
L Heneghan, T Bolger
Plant and Soil 205, 113-124, 1998
631998
Effect of components of'acid rain'on the contribution of soil microarthropods to ecosystem function
L Heneghan, T Bolger
Journal of Applied Ecology, 1329-1344, 1996
601996
Applying soil ecological knowledge to restore ecosystem services
SG Baer, L Heneghan, VT Eviner
Soil ecology and ecosystem services, 377-393, 2012
392012
Lessons learned from Chicago wilderness—implementing and sustaining conservation management in an urban setting
L Heneghan, C Mulvaney, K Ross, L Umek, C Watkins, LM Westphal, ...
Diversity 4 (1), 74-93, 2012
292012
Effects of acid rain components on soil microarthropods: a field manipulation.
L Heneghan, T Bolger
261996
Ecological research can augment restoration practice in urban areas degraded by invasive species—examples from Chicago Wilderness
L Heneghan, L Umek, B Bernau, K Grady, J Iatropulos, D Jabon, ...
Urban Ecosystems 12, 63-77, 2009
232009
Recovery of decomposition and soil microarthropod communities in an Appalachian watershed two decades after a clearcut
L Heneghan, A Salmore, DA Crossley Jr
Forest ecology and management 189 (1-3), 353-362, 2004
232004
Beasts at bedtime: Revealing the environmental wisdom in children’s literature
L Heneghan
University of Chicago Press, 2018
222018
Below‐ground causes and consequences of woodland shrub invasions: a novel paired‐point framework reveals new insights
BV Iannone III, L Heneghan, D Rijal, DH Wise
Journal of Applied Ecology 52 (1), 78-88, 2015
222015
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