Thought Leader Profile

David Gruber

Presidential Professor of Biology, Baruch College, CUNY; Explorer, National Geographic; Research Associate, American Museum of Natural History; and Adjunct Faculty, Yale School of Medicine

David Gruber is presidential professor of Biology at Baruch College, City University of New York, and serves on the faculty of the PhD program in Biology at the CUNY Graduate Center and the CUNY Macaulay Honors College. He is also an Explorer for National Geographic, a research associate in Invertebrate Zoology at the American Museum of Natural History and an adjunct faculty member at the John B. Pierce Laboratory of the Yale School of Medicine.

David's interdisciplinary research pertains to marine biology, genomics / transcriptomics of uncharacterized marine organisms, deep-sea biology and technology, photosynthesis, biofluorescence, and bioluminescence. He completed a PhD in Biological Oceanography from the Rutgers University Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences and served as a postdoctoral fellow at the Brown University Division of Biology and Medicine, working to develop fluorescent proteins into modulatable probes with neurobiological and medical applications.

David's deep-diving scientific diving teams have discovered scores of unique biofluorescent compounds, several of which have been developed into tools to find better cancer drugs. A former tropical forester for the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, in his research David utilizes Remote Operated Vehicles, submarines, extended-range SCUBA, and soft robotics (in collaboration with the Harvard Microrobotics Laboratory) to investigate corals, sponges, and delicate forms of marine fauna. David is passionate about utilizing modern technology to view the underwater world from marine creatures' perspectives. In this vein, his group developed a "shark-eye" camera to gain a shark's perspective of its marine environment. David is currently spearheading a new project to better understand the sonic communication of sperm whales using novel technological approaches.

In addition, David is committed to communicating science to the general public. He serves as a scientific advisor and producer for WNYC Studio 360's "Science and Creativity" series, and his writings have appeared in the New Yorker, the New York Times, Nature Medicine, and The Best American Science Writing. He is the co-author of Aglow in the Dark: The Revolutionary Science of Biofluorescence (Harvard University Press). He holds master's degrees in Coastal Environmental Management from Duke University and in Journalism from Columbia University. From 2017 to 2018, David was a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.

Speaker at FiRe 2018 and 2019


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FiRe 2019 Media

Hotspot: David Gruber



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FiRe 2018 Media

Whaling: Harvest or Murder?



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