Literature DB >> 12144028

Does imbalance in phylogenies reflect only bias?

Ed Stam1.   

Abstract

Phylogenetic tree imbalance was originally believed to indicate differences in evolutionary rates within trees, but other sources of imbalance have been identified, such as tree incompleteness and low quality of the data. To examine the effect of data quality, I calculated Colless's index for 69 recent complete phylogenies. On average, these phylogenies were more unbalanced than phylogenies generated by the equal rates Markov (ERM) model. I tried Mooers's (1995) method to correct for tree size, but his measure appeared to become dependent on tree size when there are large trees (i.e., > 14 tips) in a collection. Instead I corrected for tree size by taking the difference between Colless's index of observed trees and the ERM model expectation for a tree of the same size. The balance measure thus obtained did not correlate significantly to consistency and retention indices as indicators of data quality. It was also independent of the factors kingdom (plants and animals) and taxon level at the tips and type of data (molecular, morphological, and combined).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12144028     DOI: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01440.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evolution        ISSN: 0014-3820            Impact factor:   3.694


  11 in total

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6.  Tree shape-based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny.

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7.  On Sackin's original proposal: the variance of the leaves' depths as a phylogenetic balance index.

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9.  Universal artifacts affect the branching of phylogenetic trees, not universal scaling laws.

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