Senckenberg – Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth System Research (SGN), headquartered in Frankfurt am Main, is seeking to fill the following position in the Department of Botany and Evolutionary Research at the Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt as soon as possible:
PhD position – Research Assistant (m/f/d) in botany and molecular evolution
(part time)
Location: Frankfurt
Employment scope: Part-time: 65%
Type of contract: Temporary, limited to 3 years
Remuneration: Collective agreement of the state Hesse (TV-H) E/13
The Senckenberg Society for Nature Research is a member of the Leibniz Association and has been investigating the “Earth System” worldwide for more than 200 years, examining the past, analysing the present, and developing projections for the future. We conduct integrative geobiodiversity research with the aim of understanding nature in all its complexity and diversity in order to preserve it as the foundation of life for future generations and to ensure its sustainable use. Across eight institutes and five research stations throughout Germany, scientists from more than 40 countries conduct research at the highest international level. The city of Frankfurt, where the Senckenberg Society was originally founded, hosts the organization’s central administrative services along with two research institutes housing extensive scientific collections and one of Senckenberg’s most renowned institutions, the Senckenberg Natural History Museum Frankfurt. Senckenberg is as much a part of the city’s identity as its skyline and its traditional apple wine.
The Project
The research associate will have the opportunity to work towards a PhD in the field of tropical plant evolution and biodiversity research and will join the Department of Botany and Evolutionary Research. The successful applicant will work on the DFG-funded project “Exploring the Complex Origin of Pantropical Diversity: Phylogenomics, Systematics, and Biogeography of Dichapetalaceae”. Dichapetalaceae is a pantropical family of flowering plants with remarkable diversity in tropical forests of Africa, the Neotropics, and Asia. Despite its ecological and evolutionary importance, the family remains poorly understood including unresolved phylogenetic relationships, uncertain taxonomic boundaries, and limited knowledge of its biogeographic history. The project aims to generate a robust phylogenomic framework for Dichapetalaceae, reconstruct its global historical biogeography, and revise key taxonomic groups using integrative approaches combining molecular data, morphology, geography and computational evolutionary analyses. The successful candidate will benefit from close collaboration with the Professorship Biodiversity and Molecular Evolution of Flowering Plants at Goethe University Frankfurt and international partners in Europe, Africa, and beyond. The project will be conducted within an interdisciplinary collaboration framework and contribute to Senckenberg’s efforts in furthering its overall mission as well as to decipher Anthropocene biodiversity changes.