May 2, 2025
Reception & Presentations 2pm to 5pm
Cal Poly Humboldt Library
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Collections Room Project using Past Perfect 5.0
Samantha Murphy
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
Cori Brennan
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
The Collections Room Project is dedicated to digitizing and organizing the information for the various artifact collections housed in BSS 139. The parameters include using the Past Perfect 5.0 software in order to catalog the data for each individual artifact and create a database in which all the information can be housed and viewed. The final product will include information such as measurements, potential use, and physical characteristics for each artifact; attributes which may be searched, using the query field. The primary use for the compiled database is to allow for a convenient search of artifacts within the collection in order to aid in student and faculty research and study.
Spectral Analysis of Currents in Humboldt Bay
Taylor
Juchau
Oceanography
Undergraduate Student
Karina
Bernbeck
Oceanography
Undergraduate Student
Noe
Camarillo
Physics & Astronomy
Undergraduate Student
Steven
Gracy
Physics & Astronomy
Undergraduate Student
Emma
Modrick
Oceanography
Graduate Student
Tamara
Barriquand
Oceanography
Faculty
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
Our purpose is to analyze the ADCP (Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler) data from the PORTS Hookton Channel Day Marker 3 station in Humboldt Bay, CA, to compare with the analysis of the ADCP data at the PORTS Chevron Pier station done by Emma Modrick and Isabelle Marcus (Modrick et al., 2022). We want to determine the proportion that each tidal component makes to the mixed semidiurnal tides in the bay, by looking at the dominant frequencies in the tidal currents. We will then compare our results with those of Modrick and Marcus, as well as with the published results of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Histories of Chinese Communities in Humboldt County: A Source Collection
Meghan Ueland
History
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
This research project examines the historical experience of Chinese communities living in Humboldt County in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, with particular focus on the 1885 Chinese expulsion from Eureka. Offering a broad survey of primary sources, the project delves into personal letters, court cases, retrospective reports, newspaper articles, maps, and photographs to piece together a multi-faceted picture of the Chinese experience in the region. Newspapers from the time also shed light on the expulsion of the majority of the Chinese population from Eureka on 8 February 1885, a tumultuous event that dramatically transformed the culture and history of the county.
Barriers to LGBTQ+ Transition Age Youth in Humboldt County
Eugene Williams
Social Work
Graduate Student
College of Professional Studies
My community partner is the Humboldt County Transition Age Youth Collaboration (HCTAYC). The project is a preliminary research project that looks at the barriers in systems serving the LGBTQ+ transition age youth (16-26) population in Humboldt County. The outcomes from the research are the base for policy recommendations that will be used at HCTAYC. The results from the research done will address the specific question: “How are systems serving the LGBTQ+ transition age youth community in Humboldt County?”
Self Determination Theory-Based Exercise Program for Individuals with Intellectual Disability
Yaxeny
Moreno
School of Applied Health
Graduate Student
College of Professional Studies
The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of the three major components of self-determination theory (autonomy, relatedness, and competence) within a structured exercise program on the exercise performance of an adult with a disability. The study was conducted in the Student Recreation Center (SRC) with accessibility to the field house and the gym at Cal Poly Humboldt during a 6 week program. This study measures the total walking distance performed within 6 mins, as well as the number of push-ups, and the number of sit-ups performed in separate 1-minute opportunities.
Levee Stories: Myths of Management
K Bromley
Applied Anthropology
Graduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
What is the cultural significance that the Redwood Creek Levee System carries in Orick, California? The purpose of this study is to further investigate the history and management of the levee system and to apply the findings. By tracking the levee's ethos using multiple research methods and publishing, the study hopes to better understand roles humans play with regard to the levee system and to each other. Through collaboration and greater understanding of the levee system research will be revealed in the Orick wikipedia page and within an Omeka exhibit site.
Rooftop farming in Hong Kong
Ka Ki Li
Enviornmental Science Management
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
The idea of this study is to conduct more research on farming in the city, to be specific, Hong Kong. As I grew up in Hong Kong, space is one of the biggest challenges in the city. While citizens are looking for ways to implement their lifestyle, rooftop farming can be one of the great opportunities to build up a community around the neighborhood, provide fruits and vegetables for the residents, and promote a healthy living lifestyle. While promoting the idea of rooftop farming, there are obstacles that the residents need to be overcome. Therefore, I will be analyzing the ecosystem, finance, and government policy that might help the city farmers in Hong Kong.
Cost-Efficient Methods for Scottish Fishing Industries Affected by Rising Ocean
Jahaira Valencia
Physics
Undergraduate Student
Griffin Kowash
Physics
Undergraduate Student
Berlin Del Aguila
Physics
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
In our paper, we hope to find solutions to the Scottish fishing industries affected by the migration of Herring and Mackerel fish. We acquired pre-existing
data from the International Council for the Exploration of the Seas (ICES) and used it to develop a Python program that manipulates the temperature of water
in the North Sea. We identified the range of temperatures preferred by both species and used it in the simulation of our model. Finally, we calculated the cost of fishing trips as these species steered father away from the original possible fishers modeled through our Python program and a threshold for cost impracticality.
Kaulana Na Wai Eha
Kawai Navares
Forestry
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
In central Maui in the Wailuku district, a system of fresh water streams that sustained thriving Hawaiian communities since time immemorial is all dried up. Kaulana Na Wai Eha (the famous four great streams) is comprised of the Waihe’e river, Waiehu, Iao, and Waikapu streams. These waterways have been diverted since the beginning of the plantation era, to grow sugarcane. The sugarcane industry has now cease but the water is still being diverted and sold to private corporations, continuously draining the streams leaving no water for the surrounding community. I will be talking about the legal battle between the Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. v. Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation.
Kleptoplasty and Co-evolution in Humboldt Bay: A study of sea-slug, Alderia modesta, and Coenocytic Algae.
Thien Crisanto
Biology
Undergraduate Student
College of Natural Resources & Sciences
Alderia modesta is a sacoglossan sea-slug that is capable of of kleptoplasty, a process where the sea-slug steals the chloroplast from the algae that it eats , phagocytizes it, and uses it to photosynthesize. In this experiment, different groups of A. modesta were fed three different species of coenocytic algae, all of which are known to be eaten by sacoglossans. The cerata (anatomical structures) were then plucked off and the chloroplasts were counted under a fluorescence microscope to compare which alga the sea-slug ingested the most. The experiment has yet to conclude, however, the alga with the highest ratio of chloroplasts is considered to have co-evolved with the sea-slug.