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Escaping from the Felsenstein Zone by Detecting Long Branches in Phylogenetic Data
Authors:James Lyons-Weiler  Guy A Hoelzer
Institution:aGraduate Program in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada, 89557;bDepartment of Biology, Department of Environmental and Resource Sciences, Graduate Program in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada, 89557
Abstract:Long branches in a true phylogeny tend to disrupt hierarchical character covariation (phylogenetic signal) in the distribution of traits among organisms. The distortion of hierarchical structure in character-state matrices can lead to errors in the estimation of phylogenetic relationships and inconsistency of methods of phylogenetic inference. Examination of trees distorted by long-branch attraction will not reveal the identities of problematic taxa, in part because the distortion can mask long branches by reducing inferred branch lengths and through errors in branching order. Here we present a simple method for the detection of taxa whose placement in evolutionary trees is made difficult by the effects of long-branch attraction. The method is an extension of a tree-independent conceptual framework of phylogenetic data exploration (RASA). Taxa that are likely to attract are revealed because long branches leave distinct footprints in the distribution of character states among taxa, and these traces can be directly observed in the error structure of the RASA regression. Problematic taxa are identified using a new diagnostic plot called the taxon variance plot, in which the apparent cladistic and phenetic variances contributed by individual taxa are compared. The procedure for identifying long edges employs algorithms solved in polynomial time and can be applied to morphological, molecular, and mixed characters. The efficacy of the method is demonstrated using simulated evolution and empirical evidence of long branches in a set of recently published sequences. We show that the accuracy of evolutionary trees can be improved by detecting and combating the potentially misleading influences of long-branch taxa.
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