
Professor Davide Pisani
BSC(Parma), PhD(Bristol)
Current positions
Professor of Phylogenomics
School of Earth SciencesProfessor of Phylogenomics
School of Biological Sciences
Contact
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Research interests
My research is at the interface of molecular and organismal biology. I am interested in the application of comparative genomics to investigate key problems in organismal evolution, and the combination of genomic and paleontological information to study evolution. I am interested in the early Earth, the coevolution of life and Earth, the origin and early diversification of cellular life and eukaryogenesis. I am interested in major evolutionary transitions and I have recently been working at developing a timescale for life on Earth, the origin of animals and the phylogeny of non-bilaterian animals (sponges, jellifishes, comb jellies, corals and the elusive placozoans). I am interested in the evolution of the Ecdysozoa (the moulting animals), particularly the tardigrades (water bears), onychophora (velvet worms) and Arthropoda (insects, millipedes, crustaceans, spiders etc). I use Ecdysozoa as a model to study patterns and processes of colonisation of land. I am intereststed in the evolution of sensory functions (particularly chemoreception and life reception), as detecting these envirounmental cues is key for a diversity of life forms (both unicellular and multicellular). Finally, I am interested in the study and development of phylogenetic-based methods of analyses, and I have been developing and implementing in software supertree reconstruction methods. I have an interest in Astrobiology and I have been collaborating with the NASA Astrobiology institute from 2002 to 2018.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Origin and evolution of the vertebrate skeleton
Role
Co-Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
07/09/2024 to 31/08/2028
Between rocks and clocks: evolutionary history of Hymenoptera during the radiation of flowering plants
Principal Investigator
Role
Principal Investigator
Description
The order Hymenoptera encompasses ants, wasps, and bees and is a textbook example of a diverse clade, known from more than 120,000 living species, that display extraordinary morphological, taxonomic, and…Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
04/03/2024 to 31/05/2024
PhyloPycno
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
01/09/2021 to 31/08/2023
MSC Fellow- Carlos Rivera - EU 892606 — RipGEESE
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
03/05/2021 to 02/05/2024
Thesis supervisions
Post-processing of phylogenetic trees
Supervisors
Estimating a timescale for the tree of life using integrated fossil and genomic methods
Supervisors
Exploring the evolutionary relationships amongst eukaryote groups using comparative genomics, with a particular focus on the excavate taxa
Supervisors
Investigating tricky nodes in the Tree of Life
Supervisors
Modelling fossil and molecular data to establish the timescale of animal evolution
Supervisors
Isolating evolutionary phenomena in analyses of disparity
Supervisors
The Ecological Correlates of Mammal Coloration
Supervisors
Comparative genomics of sponges (Porifera) gives insight into early animal evolution
Supervisors
Life in the extreme
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
26/01/2025A timescale for the evolutionary history of sea spiders (Arthropoda: Pycnogonida)
Evolutionary Journal of the Linnean Society
CAT-Posterior Mean Site Frequencies improves phylogenetic modeling under Maximum Likelihood and resolves Tardigrada as the sister of Arthropoda plus Onychophora
Genome Biology and Evolution
The emergence of metabolisms through Earth history and implications for biospheric evolution
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Independent origins of spicules reconcile the evolutionary history of sponges
A geological timescale for bacterial evolution and oxygen adaptation
Science