Dr. David K. Ngugi

Research Division 3: Marine Ecology
RU Marine Symbioses
Aquatic Microbial Ecogenomics Group (AquaMEG)

Office:
Room: 4.519
Phone: +49 431 600-4490
Email: dngugi@geomar.de
Address:
Wischhofstraße 1-3, Building 5, Room: 4.519
D-24148 Kiel

Research interests

My research focusses on two areas:

(1) host-microbe interactions in various non-model organisms

(2) climate change microbiology with a focus on aquatic systems

In the first, I am in interested in the role of microorganisms in habitat acclimation and nutrition in the sponge meta-organism, the genetic mechanisms of adaptation facilitating invertebrate colonization at the marine/land boundary, and the role and evolutionary history of the enteric microbiome in herbivorous surgeonfish and how they impact reef biogeochemical processes.

In the second area of my research, I am interested in the eco-evolutionary responses of aquatic microorganisms to environmental change, and in particular the link between ecosystem service provision and microbial biodiversity in the context of climate change. In both research areas, I extensively use large-scale metagenomes and other omics data coupled with cutting-age computational biology approaches, including machine learning techniques, to gain insights into future biodiversity trends and to elucidate functional responses of keystone species in an ecosystem constrained by global climate change.

Education & academic positions

Education

2024 Diploma in Data Science (Machine Learning), University of Sorbonne, France

2005–2008 PhD (Microbial Ecology), MPI for Terrestrial Microbiology, Germany

2002–2004 MSc. (Microbiology), Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Kenya

1997–2002 Bachelor of Education, Kenyatta University, Kenya

Academic Positions

2018–2023 Junior Group Leader, Leibniz Institute DSMZ, Braunschweig, Germany

2016 –2018 Senior bioinformatics research scientist, KAUST, Saudi Arabia

2010–2016 Research Scientist, Red Sea Research Center, KAUST, Saudi Arabia

2008–2010 Postdoc, MPI for Terrestrial Microbiology, Marburg, Germany

Awards and Fellowships

  • ISME12 travel grant from the International Max Planck Research School (Germany)
  • Doctoral fellowship from the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
  • Internship fellowship from the International Max Planck Research School, Germany

Third-Party Funding

  • (2021–2024) - 246,995 € research grant, the German Research Foundation (DFG) as
  • (2020–2024) - 253,000 € research grant, the German Research Foundation (DFG) as

Professional Services

Managing Board Member for Peer Community in Microbiology ()

Associate Editor for Marine Biology and Frontiers Microbiology

Selected Publications

5 Key Publications (total of 45; complete publication list is available in or )

  1. Ngugi DK, Salcher MM, Andrei A-S, Ghai R, Klotz F, Chiriac M-C, Ionescu D, Buesing P, Grossart H-P, Xing P, Priscu JC, Alymkulov S, and Pester M. (2023). Postglacial adaptations enabled colonization and quasi-clonal dispersal of ammonia-oxidizing archaea in modern European large lakes. , 9:adc9392.
  2. Ngugi DK, Silvia GA, Sánchez P, Gasol JM, Agusti S, Karl DM, and Duarte CM. (2023). Abiotic selection of microbial genome size in the global ocean. , 14: 1384.
  3. Pogoreutz C, Oakley CA, Raedecker N, Cárdenas A, Perna G, Peng L, Davy SK, Ngugi DK, and Voolstra CR. (2022). Coral holobiont cues prime Endozoicomonas to a symbiotic lifestyle. , 16:1883–1895.
  4. Duarte CM, Ngugi DK, Alam I, Pearman J, Kamau A, Eguiluz VM, Gojobori T, Acinas S, Gasol JM, Bajic VB, and Irigoien X. (2020). Sequencing effort dictates gene discovery in marine microbial metagenomes. , 22:4589–4603.
  5. Ngugi DK, Miyake S, Cahill MJ, Vinu M, Hackmann TJ, Blom J, Tietbohl M., Berumen M., and Stingl U. (2017). Genomic diversification of giant enteric symbionts reflects host dietary lifestyle. , 114:E7592–E7601.

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