David James Alexander Edward Harris
Researcher
Applied Phylogenetics
CIBIO, Centro de Investigacao em Biodiversidade e Recursos Geneticos
Portugal
Biography
"My main research interests are in phylogenetic analysis, mostly involving African and European amphibians and reptiles. In particular I have been studying the relationships of Lacertid lizard groups, especially Podarcis. This has grown into a comparative analysis of various taxa found on both sides of the Strait of Gibraltar. As well as phylogenetic analysis of herpetofauna I have also worked with a wider range of organisms including crayfish, barnacles, dogwhelks, fruit-flies, limpets and hares. My other main line of research is in island biogeography, using reptiles as model organisms. The primary island groups I have studied are the Madeira archipelago, Cape Verde islands, the islands of the Gulf of Guinea, and the Comoros islands. I use phylogenies to determine patterns of colonization, to identify introduced taxa, and to reassess taxonomy of species from these diverse island groups."
Research Interest
Phylogenetic analysis, mostly involving African and European amphibians and reptiles
Publications
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Rosado D, Rato C, Salvi D, Harris DJ (2017) Evolutionary History of the Morocco lizard-Fingered Geckos of the Saurodactylus brosseti Complex. Evolutionary Biology, 44(3): 386-400.
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Rocha S, Perera A, Bunbury N, Kaiser-Bunbury CN, Harris DJ (2017) Speciation history and species-delimitation within the Seychelles Bronze geckos, Ailuronyx spp.: molecular and morphological evidence. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 120(3): 518-538.
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Mulder KP, Cortazar-Chinarro M, Harris DJ , Crottini A, Grant EHC, Fleischer RC, Savage AE (2017) Evolutionary dynamics of an expressed MHC class II beta locus in the Ranidae (Anura) uncovered by genome walking and high-throughput amplicon sequencing. Developmental & Comparative Immunology, 76: 177-188.