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Phylogenetic tree

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A phylogenetic tree is a tree showing the evolutionary interrelationships among various species or other entities that are believed to have a common ancestor. A phylogenetic tree is a form of a cladogram. In a phylogenetic tree, each node with descendants represents the most recent common ancestor of the descendants, and edge lengths correspond to time estimates. Each node in a phylogenetic tree is called a taxonomic unit. Internal nodes are generally referred to as Hypothetical Taxonomic Units (HTUs) as they cannot be directly observed.

Fig. 1: A speculatively rooted tree for rRNA genes
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Fig. 1: A speculatively rooted tree for rRNA genes

Hodge, T. & M. J. T. V. Cope}}. 2000. A Myosin Family Tree. Journal of Cell Science 113: 3353-3354. See also the Myosin external link below.
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Hodge, T. & M. J. T. V. Cope}}. 2000. A Myosin Family Tree. Journal of Cell Science 113: 3353-3354. See also the Myosin external link below.

A rooted phylogenetic tree is a directed tree with a unique node corresponding to the (usually imputed) most recent common ancestor of all the entities at the leaves of the tree. Figure 1 depicts a rooted phylogenetic tree, which has been colored according to the three-domain system. 1998. The Universal Ancestor. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 95: 6854-6859.. The most common method for rooting trees is the use of an uncontroversial outgroup - close enough to allow inference from sequence or trait data, but far enough to be a clear outgroup.

While unrooted phylogenetic trees can be generated from rooted ones by omitting the root from a rooted tree, a root cannot be inferred on an unrooted tree without either an outgroup or additional assumptions (for instance, about relative rates of divergence). Figure 2 depicts an unrooted phylogenetic tree 2002. Uprooting the Tree of Life. The Scientist 16: 18 (Sep. 16, 2002); [subscription only] for myosin, a superfamily of proteins. Links to other pictures are given in the pictures on the web subsection below.

There are three main methods of constructing phylogenetic trees: distance-based methods such as neighbour-joining, parsimony-based methods such as maximum parsimony, and character-based methods such as maximum likelihood or Bayesian inference.

Tree-building methods can be assessed on the basis of several criteria. 1992. Progress with methods for constructing evolutionary trees. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 7: 73-79.:

Caveats

See also

References

External links

Pictures on the web

General

[ edit]
Topics in phylogenetics
Relevant fields: phylogenetics | computational phylogenetics | molecular phylogeny | cladistics
Basic concepts: synapomorphy | phylogenetic tree | phylogenetic network | long branch attraction
Phylogeny inference methods: maximum parsimony | maximum likelihood | neighbour joining | UPGMA
Current topics: PhyloCode | DNA barcoding
List of evolutionary biology topics

 


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