Excellence in research
Fourteen 91 honors students and eleven faculty members from the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics traveled to Winston-Salem State University to attend the 120th Annual Meeting April 5-6.
During the meeting, Lenoir-Rhyne students shared undergraduate honors research in oral and poster presentations earning a total of nine awards and interacted with student researchers and professors from other colleges and universities across North Carolina. Carly York, Ph.D., associate professor in the biology department led a workshop entitled, The Science of Storytelling. In addition to presentations and workshops, attendees heard from Steven Cowley, Ph.D., director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory as he gave the keynote lecture, Getting to Fusion Electricity.
91 students and faculty served NCAS in a variety of leadership roles. The new officers of the Collegiate Academy of the NCAS (CANCAS) include Jackson Owens 25 as president, Ivy Throneburg 25 as vice president and Elijah Yang 25 as historian, replacing positions vacated by Reagan Womack 24, Diego Sanjuan 24 and Erica Schulz 24, respectively. Biology professors Michael Stiff, Ph.D., and Judy Moore, Ph.D., serve on the Board of Directors of NCAS, and numerous faculty members served as judges.
Student presenters and their research titles are listed below, with faculty research advisor in parentheses.
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Gezell Alberto-Tenjhay 24 (Daniel Grimm, Ph.D.): Analysis of cell-free extracts of endophytic fungi: the search for antibacterial metabolites, chemistry oral presentation.
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Kayla Dietz 24 (Andy Steele, Ph.D.): The analysis of polychlorinated biphenyls in soil samples, third place, molecular and cell biology oral presentation.
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Christina Fisher 25 (Grimm): Antimicrobial potential of fungal endophytes isolated from eight different invasive plant species of North Carolina, first place, microbiology oral presentation.
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Cheyenne Kimberlin 24 (Grimm): Mechanical spread of microorganisms via the common feeder cockroach Blaptica dubia: A model for bacterial and viral transmission, first place, microbiology poster.
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Caleb Knight 24 (Doug Knight, Ph.D.): Validation of force between spherical conductors, chemistry oral presentation.
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Bethany Perry 24 (Stiff): Effects of temperature increase on circadian rhythm and stomatal development in soybeans (Glycine max), second place, ecology, botany and zoology oral presentation.
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Salma Ramirez-Sanchez 24 (Grimm/Steele): Comparison of the antifungal effects of carvacrol, thymol and oregano oil on Candida albicans,microbiology oral presentation.
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Demmi Ramos 25 (Timothy Goldberg, Ph.D.): Investigating tipping points in the Budyko climate model, first place, chemistry oral presentation.
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Isaac Riggs 24 (Marsha Fanning, Ph.D.): The effect of smoke-water on germination and growth: a comparative study of fire-adapted and non-fire-adapted plant species, ecology, botany and zoology oral presentation.
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Amy Sain 24 (Steele): Selenium deficiency in horses, chemistry oral presentation.
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Diego Sanjuan 24 (Grimm): Isolation and cultivation of gut bacteria from larvae of the greater wax moth (Galleria mellonella): A potential resource for bioremediation of polyethylene, third place, ecology, botany and biology oral presentation.
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Erica Schulz 24 (Knight): The viability and characterization of sucrose and alkali metal nitrates as solid rocket propellant, third place, chemistry oral presentation.
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Lynn Van Staalduinen 24 (Grimm): Role of EPS-degrading substances in phage-based strategies of biofilm disruption in enteric pathogens, second place, microbiology oral presentation.
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Reagan Womack 24 (Joshua Ring, Ph.D.): Computational analysis of human prion protein allosteric potential reveals potential pharmacological chaperon binding site for V1891 and V2031PrPSc, first place chemistry poster.
Junior honor students Hannah Elrod 25, Jackson Owens 25, Ivy Throneburg 25, Ellie Wilhelm 25, and Elijah Yang 25 also attended the meeting.
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