Questions tagged [phylogenetics]

A sub-discipline of evolutionary biology which involves the study of evolutionary relatedness between different organisms based on their molecular and morphological features.

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What "most closely related to" means in phylogenetic trees?

Here is a sample phylogenetic tree from a textbook publisher: We often ask questions like "Which organism is most closely related to the pig, the hedgehog or the cow?" I don't like these ...
toothandsticks's user avatar
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1 answer
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Can somebody explain why mouse and cow are the least related based on this sequenece alignment?

Answer key says out of the choices, the mouse and cow and the least related. Is it because they have the most number of differences out of the four choices? (Hedgehog/Horse is 5, dog/horse is 3, mouse/...
geneticscodingnoob's user avatar
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Recommendations for Books on Systematic Phylogenetics

I am a physics major and need to study systematic phylogenetics for a research project. Can someone please recommend at least one introductory and one advanced book, please?
John Gama's user avatar
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How are ray finned and lobe finned fish are sister clades?

I think my previous questions may have been misinterpreted (I honestly was too tired to formulate what exactly I was confused about), so I’d like to elaborate on my confusion about the phylogeny of ...
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Correlated evolution of discrete traits: do traits need to have phylogenetic signal?

I'm doing a phylogenetic analysis using the Discrete program in BayesTraits. Of the traits I am testing, one of them does not show any phylogenetic signal (using the Fritz and Purvis d-statistic). ...
SPW's user avatar
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How are ray-finned and lobe-finned fish related in terms of their evolutionary history?

I'm trying to trace human evolution back to the first eukaryotic cells (as a tool to research the evolution of various bodily systems), and I understand that lobe-finned fishes are considered a key ...
Sean Holm's user avatar
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How do we logically infer large time scales using Molecular Clocks?

If molecular clocks are uses in genetics to determine the mutation rate of genes to estimate times speciation occurred between two or more life forms, are there genes that have mutation rates that we ...
Qubit's user avatar
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How to judge the distance of nodes in biological evolution tree

I would like to know the method of judging the distance between two nodes in the phylogenetic tree. For example, in the diagram below, is node 299 closer to node 151, or closer to node 201?
rona's user avatar
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Size of Purussaurus, a giant Miocene crocodylian (2022) [closed]

What is the currently accepted size estimates (length and mass) of Purussurus barsiliensis? I quote the relevant part in Wikipedia. From Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purussaurus The skull ...
Triceratops's user avatar
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Database of unique attributes of biological model systems

I am interested in deviations from standard eukaryotic biological mechanisms: Sperm chromatin lacks nucleosomes, and are instead highly condensed by protamines. (most eukaryotic chromatin has ...
batlike's user avatar
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Is Zayed et al.’s revision of Orthornavirae robust?

Zayed et al. (April 7, 2022) in Science “Cryptic and abundant marine viruses at the evolutionary origins of Earth’s RNA virome” report several major hitherto-unknown Ribovirial phyla: The two most ...
alexchandel's user avatar
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What are the apomorphies of Streptophyta that delineate them from Chlorophyta in Viridiplantae?

I'm reading through Plant Systematics, 3rd Edition by Michael G. Simpson, and am having a hard time understanding the differences between the Chlorophytes and Streptophytes - discussed in Chapter 3: ...
John Luke Lusty's user avatar
3 votes
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Is there a single protostomate common ancestor that has pseudocoelomate structure?

I think about 15 years ago I saw a new classification system that placed Plathyhelminthes worms with Annelids and Mollusks into a superphylum (or other systematic clade) Lophotrochozoa, while ...
Joseph Hirsch's user avatar
11 votes
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139 views

The almost extinct dinosaurs

Dinosaurs split into "lizard-hipped" and "bird-hipped" dinosaurs. Of these two groups, only the "lizard-hipped" (Saurischia) survived (these names are backwards). Of ...
Kevin Kostlan's user avatar
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On the origin and evolution of vaccinia virus

I was browsing Wikipedia and learned that vaccinia virus, the basis of the smallpox (variola virus) vaccine, was originally thought to be derived from cowpox but was later discovered to be a separate ...
Adam Lincoln Steele's user avatar
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1 answer
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Why Account for Phylogeny when using Relative Brain Size as a Surragate for Intelligence

This paper tries to relate intelligence, life history, and urban fitness of birds. They use relative brain size of each species as a surrogate measure of intelligence. Although this may not be the ...
E Tam's user avatar
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How old is the Pogona genus?

What it says on the title, how old is the genus Pogona, which includes all bearded dragons? I tried looking online, and all I got was the useless answer of “bearded dragons are descended from their ...
The Jaunty Fool's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
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Defining "species" (Are species an emergent property or an ensemble of quantitative differences?)

Interbreeding Defining species by the criteria of not being able to breed is problematic: The concept loses its meaning in phylogenetic prospective, since closely related species were able to breed ...
Roger V.'s user avatar
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Blood samples in cell lysis

I will be joining a team of field biologists on a trip to some uninhabited islands in the tropics. We will be collecting bird blood samples for some genetic research. We will be out there for two ...
Dacia Wiitala's user avatar
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Is the General Cirrate Octopus Form the Basalmost Octopoda Morphology?

The reason I ask this is due to the distinctive internal mantle shells of cirrina, of which the incerrata have stylets that are a remnant of the cirrate shell. Along with this, both cirrate octopuses ...
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Creating a phylogenetic tree from my selected publicly-available sequences (WGS) in NCBI

I'm currently writing a paper on the comparison of virulence genes for a group of bacteria. I got my data from publicly-available whole genome sequences in NCBI. Now, I want to create a phylogenetic ...
rimuru's user avatar
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Advice on type of database and software for research on genetic diversity of crops

for a research project I am evaluating the potential of Robusta coffee genetic resources in the tropic region of Africa. Different ex-situ genetic lines will be mapped as well as chemical, ...
Robrecht's user avatar
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Which is the best model organism to implement an evolutionary study for P.falciparum?

I have to study and implement some evolutionary statistics for P.falciparum. In your opinion and by your experience, which organism should I consider in order to take the orthologs to implement this ...
Spartan 117's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
234 views

Why is the null hypothesis of trait evolution Brownian motion?

Many models of continuous trait evolution assume that traits evolve according to Brownian motion. What is the biological or physical basis for this choice? I realize there are models that do not ...
jmah's user avatar
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how to estimate phylogeny without using DNA sequences?

I am new to bioinformatics, I am reading ‘Analysis of Phylogenetics Second Edition and Evolution with R’ from Emmanuel Paradis. I can create phylogeny from DNA sequences, by first calculating the ...
Chicago1988's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
127 views

Examples of species whose extinct common ancestor is well documented?

If we follow the ascendence line of two closely related species we can build a "Theoretical" common ancestor, whose characteristics were inherited with few differences by the offspring. <...
Dennis Fr's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
81 views

Metrics to analyze branch lengths in phylogenetic trees

I'm interested know about some basic metrics that could be used to discriminate trees based on their branch lengths. I know of branch length unaware topological/tree shape-based methods such as ...
Floris's user avatar
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Controlling for phylogenetic signal - what is statistically appropriate?

I am currently collaborating with a fellow PhD student. We are both in the same Biology department, but my collaborator is more of a natural historian, so I am handling the statistical side of things. ...
Winston Campeau's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
428 views

An online tree of life with extinct species present?

There are awesome online phylogenetic trees such as OneZoom. But they all only list living species. I want to see dinosaurs between birds and crocodiles. I wanna see that humans are reptiliomorphs ...
lolmaus - Andrey Mikhaylov's user avatar
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Protein content in chemical composition of different phyla?

The protein content in the human body is roughly 15%, what are the percentages for other organisms? Bacteria, plants, fungi, protozoa, etc.
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Why would a 2019-nCoV protein sequence in the NCBI database match a protein submitted in 2018?

There seems to be a bit of a conspiracy theory brewing over some data in the NCBI database, and I don't have the necessary knowledge to make sense of it. It basically goes like this: Go to NCBI ...
JLRishe's user avatar
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1 answer
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What does it mean for there to be no correlation between phylogenetic independent contrast?

I am testing the correlation between two physiological parameters in plants using the pic function in R. I am a bit stuck on the interpretation of the phylogenetic independent contrast (PIC). Without ...
Ariana7521's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
145 views

Is there any program or website that allows me to create phylogenetic trees without having to insert an already created dataset?

I asked a similar question on Quora before, but did not get any useful answers as the program the one answerer suggested turned out to have the exact same problems as all others I have found so far. ...
Grant Hartlage's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
55 views

What is the technical term for when a clade on a phylogenetic tree does not have an extended branch? (see image)

As we see with ZCA2, ECA2 & XCA2 these branches are compressed and do not extend as TCA does. Is there a technical term for this and what usually causes it?
JoshuaAJones's user avatar
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What are the methods for detecting anagenetic versus cladogenetic change?

I'm new to the study of phylogenetics and am wondering if there are ways of identifying evolutionary changes that associate with cladogenetic events versus those that arise via anagenesis.
Namenlos's user avatar
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1 vote
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Phylogenical differences with nuclear and mitochondrial DNA

This is a textbook question, I would like to verify my answers. According to the textbook it is possible to construct a phylogeny using nuclear and mitochondrial DNA and these trees to be different, I ...
Cure's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
453 views

Does the minimum spanning tree tell us anything useful about evolutionary ancestry?

Question migrated from bioinformatics stackexchange due to lack of interest. I'm new to bioinformatics and have been reading through a bioinformatics book, and it seems calculating a phylogenetic ...
yters's user avatar
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1 vote
2 answers
244 views

How to reduce the number of sequences in a Multiple Sequence Alignment?

I have a Multiple Sequence Alignment, where there are around 5000 sequences. There also exists many sequences where, there are so much of non-sequenced regions (for instance, AU----CGGGCA--NNNNNNNNNN)....
User's user avatar
  • 143
2 votes
1 answer
70 views

How evolutionarily conserved are UTRs?

Coding sequences of genes have a certain degree of evolutionary conservation, so that comparisons based on sequences (BLAST, HMMER etc) can be informative. Generally speaking, the more two species are ...
LinuxBlanket's user avatar
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2 votes
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How valid is Schwartz's criticism of molecular phylogenetics?

A proponent of the human-orangutan clade, Jeffrey Schwartz argues, in this paper [1], that molecular phylogenetics is largely based on a baseless assumption. To sum up, according to him: this type of ...
Tisserand's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
41 views

How to define ammonites?

I miss the definition of ammonite. In my opinion, many authors confuse the term "Ammonite" and "Ammonoid". Ammonoids (Ammonoidea) are large group of cephalopods including for example goniatites (...
Petr Hykš's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
94 views

How to create a phylogenetic tree (using Maximum Likelihood method) in newick format for a Multiple Sequence Alignment file in FASTA format?

The file size is really big (26.7 MB). So, I am unable to use the online web tools, as they cannot handle such large input data.
User's user avatar
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5 votes
2 answers
476 views

What is the best argument for maximum parsimony method in phylogenetic tree construction?

Beside the fact that maximum parsimony is computationally cheap, what other good arguments are there for it? Is there any model behind this principle? Why would one expect this principle to provide ...
Ahmed Abdullah's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
43 views

Are phylogenetic tree construction algorithms any different than general clustering algorithms?

I suspect the answer is no. But I don't know enough to be sure that that is the case. Of course phylogenetic tree construction uses biological knowledge, e.g special distance metrics, but does it ...
Ahmed Abdullah's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
138 views

Can anyone help me with these Biology evolutionary properties homework questions? [closed]

my teacher assigned these worksheet questions, they are ungraded, but he said something might come up on the test really similar to this so I really want to get all of them right. I am pretty ...
Nancy's user avatar
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3 votes
1 answer
737 views

The phylogenetic definition of the clade Dinosauria

Up until two years ago the clade of Dinosauria was defined as all the descendants of the most recent common ancestor of Triceratops and birds. From Wikipedia: Under phylogenetic nomenclature, ...
Triceratops's user avatar
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Question regarding when it's a homoplasy in a phylogenetic tree

If you have 2 organisms that both come directly from the same common ancestor on a phylogenetic tree, and that common ancestor does not have trait "x", is it possible for both of its direct ...
BioStudent4451's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
80 views

Were there any terrestrial species in the ancestry of all crustaceans?

To the exception of woodlice, Crustaceans live in aquatic (marine or freshwater) environments. Crustaceans are arthropods which is an immensely diverse taxon. Many arthropods live in terrestrial ...
Remi.b's user avatar
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1 vote
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Is there a measure for degree of reticulation in a phylogenetic network?

When working with phylogenetic networks, how does one talk about reticulate (i.e., web-like) the branches are? Is there a standard measure of this?
Namenlos's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
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How to determine the number of parameters in a phylogenetic model?

I want to calculate the AIC for a phylogeny that I inferred via maximum likelihood. To calculate the AIC I need to know the number of parameters in the model. But how do I determine this?
Namenlos's user avatar
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