Reagan Wytsalucy
Agriculture and Natural Resources
Extension Assistant Professor | Agriculture & Natural Resources | San Juan County

Contact Information
Office Location: San Juan CountyPhone: (435) 587-3239
Email: reagan.wytsalucy@usu.edu
Additional Information:
Educational Background
Biography
Reagan Wytsalucy is a member of the Navajo Nation and completed her education at Utah State University in Plant Sciences. She specializes in Horticulture and Agronomy.
Teaching Interests
Horticulture (community gardens), field crop management, grazing management, turf management, irrigation management.
Research Interests
Native food crops (peach and Navajo spinach), Pinyon Pine production, farmers market development projects.
Publications | Abstracts
- Paudel, A., Sun, Y., Harris, P., Wytsalucy, R., Stewart, R., Exploration of whether scionwood of single-leaf pinyon pine (Pinus monophylla), a promising nut-tree crop native to the Great Basin, USA, can be successfully grafted in the summer and fall. XV World Forestry Congress *
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | Books
- Wytsalucy, R., Stewart, A., (2024). The Tree Collectors: A Tale of Arboreal Obsession. Random House LLC *
Publications | Book Chapters
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | Fact Sheets
- Wytsalucy, R., Feuz, R., Larsen, R., Wray, P., (2021). Size and Scope of San Juan County Agriculture 2020. Utah State University Extension
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | Journal Articles
Academic Journal
- Wheeler, W., Wytsalucy, R., Black, B.L, Cardon, G., Bugbee, B.G, (2019). Drought tolerance of navajo and lovell peach trees: Precision water stress using automated weighing lysimeters. HortScience, 54:5, 799-803.
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | MultiMedia
Audio
- Wytsalucy, R., (2024). Navajo food traditions tap into the past, and future, of farming the arid Southwest. . *
- Wytsalucy, R., Think Farmers should do without irrigation? Here what that looks like. *
Video
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | Other
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.