Bruno Camilo has held a Master's degree in Palaeobiology from the University of Opole since 2019. Over the last 25 years, he has conducted research in the field of Vertebrate Palaeobiology, mainly focusing on the Late Jurassic period. He is also Director of the Centre for Palaeobiology and Palaeoecology at the Natural History Society, where he coordinates the management team of the palaeontological collection, one of the most important repositories of vertebrate and invertebrate fossils in the European Upper Jurassic record. He has also played an active role in defending the palaeontological heritage as a georesource, being a founding member of the UNESCO Global Geopark Oeste, which comprises six municipalities in western Portugal (Torres Vedras, Lourinhã, Bombarral, Alenquer, Cadaval and Peniche). He co-coordinated the first Geographic Information System Applied to Palaeontology (SIGAP) in the Iberian Peninsula, built using open source software.