Spencer Fire, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor | Ocean Engineering and Marine Sciences

  • Melbourne FL UNITED STATES

Dr. Fire's research program combines an interest in the very smallest and the very largest organisms in the sea.

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Areas of Expertise

Wildlife Toxicology
Marine Mammals
Harmful Algal Blooms
Marine Biotoxins
Red Tide

About

Spencer Fire's research program combines an interest in the very smallest and the very largest organisms in the sea (and occasionally a few in between). From single-celled marine algae (phytoplankton) to shellfish, finfish, sea turtles, humans and marine mammals such as baleen whales, the interactions between these organism can tell us much about the status of our oceans' health.

Dr. Fire's current research focuses on the impacts of harmful algal blooms and their toxins on marine food webs and the health of sentinel organisms such as marine mammals. To carry out this work, Dr. Fire and his students focus on three core areas:

1. Developing and using molecular detection methods to investigate how natural contaminants move through marine food webs,

2. Drawing on field experience with small cetaceans and pinnipeds, as well as knowledge of field survey methods, to study marine mammal health and behavior in the wild,

3. Combining a knowledge of large-scale oceanographic processes with laboratory and field methods to study changing marine ecosystems and their links to wildlife and human health.

Media Assets

Media Appearances

Dolphin health is connected to human well-being

Phys.org  

2015-08-19

Florida Institute of Technology assistant professor Spencer Fire and researchers from lead agency Georgia Aquarium and other conservation partners recently completed a study to better understand the health of Atlantic bottlenose dolphins in the IRL, and the data collected from the dolphins is expected to help researchers understand how toxic algal blooms can harm wildlife.

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Florida Tech to study toxic algae impact on dolphins

Florida Today  

2017-02-03

"Anything you see happening to the health of these populations would indicate a risk to human populations," said Spencer Fire, an assistant professor of biological sciences at FIT who will conduct the research.

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Whales change their tunes when ships appear

CNN  

2018-10-24

Despite these caveats, Spencer Fire, assistant professor in Florida Tech’s Department of Ocean Engineering and Marine Sciences, described the new research as “solid.”

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Education

University of California Santa Cruz

M.S.

Marine Science

2002

Brigham Young University

B.S.

Zoology

2000

University of California Santa Cruz

Ph.D.

Ocean Sciences

2007

Social

Selected Articles

Association between red tide exposure and detection of corresponding neurotoxins in bottlenose dolphins from Texas waters during 2007–2017

Marine Environmental Research

2020

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Antarctic ecosystem responses following ice-shelf collapse and iceberg calving: Science review and future research

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change

2020

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An assessment of temporal, spatial and taxonomic trends in harmful algal toxin exposure in stranded marine mammals from the U.S. New England coast

PLoS ONE

2021

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Languages

  • Spanish