background 0background 1background 2background 3

The CSU has a new policy on freedom of expression. Learn more.

Breadcrumb

Portrait of Christine Cass, Ph.D.

Contact

christine.cass@humboldt.edu
  • 200A Natural Resources Building

Christine Cass, Ph.D.

Associate Professor & Department Chair

My research interests focus on the ecology and physiology of zooplankton and invertebrate nekton. My previous work has examined adaptations of copepods to permanent oxygen minimum zones in the eastern tropical Pacific. With my recent move to the northern California coast, I hope to spend more time concentrating on the California Current ecosystem. Specifically, I hope to examine factors that affect the energetic quality of zooplankton inhabiting this region and how this might ultimately affect energy transfer to upper trophic levels.

Personal Interests

Scuba diving, snorkeling, basketball, softball, racquetball and swimming

  • Ph.D., Marine Science, 2011, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg
  • B.A., Biology, 2005, Pomona College, Claremont, CA

    OCN 109L General Oceanography Lab

    OCN 301 Marine Ecosystems - Human Impact

    OCN 310 Biological Oceanography

    OCN 410 Zooplankton Ecology

    OCN 485 Undergraduate Seminar

    OCN 495 Field Cruise I

    OCN 495 Field Cruise II

    Cass, CJ, SG Wakeham and KL Daly. 2011. Lipid composition of tropical and subtropical copepod species of the genus Rhincalanus (Copepoda: Eucalanidae): a novel fatty acid and alcohol signature. Marine Ecology-progress Series 439: 127-138.

    Cass, C.J. and K.L. Daly. 2015. Ecological characteristics of eucalanoid copepods of the eastern tropical North Pacific Ocean: adaptations for life within a low oxygen system. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 468: 118-129.

    Cass, C., K. Daly and S. Wakeham. 2014. Assessment of storage lipid accumulation patterns in eucalanoid copepods from the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Deep-sea Research Part I-Oceanographic Research Papers 93: 117-130.

    Cass, C. and K. Daly. 2014. Eucalanoid copepod metabolic rates in the oxygen minimum zone of the eastern tropical north Pacific. Deep-sea Research Part I-Oceanographic Research Papers 94: 137-149.