English

Characterizing phylogenetically decisive taxon coverage

Populations and Evolution 2009-06-29 v1 Quantitative Methods

Abstract

Increasingly, biologists are constructing evolutionary trees on large numbers of overlapping sets of taxa, and then combining them into a `supertree' that classifies all the taxa. In this paper, we ask how much coverage of the total set of taxa is required by these subsets in order to ensure we have enough information to reconstruct the supertree uniquely. We describe two results - a combinatorial characterization of the covering subsets to ensure that at most one supertree can be constructed from the smaller trees (whatever trees these may be) and a more liberal analysis that asks only that the supertree is highly likely to be uniquely specified by the tree structure on the covering subsets.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0906.4875,
  title  = {Characterizing phylogenetically decisive taxon coverage},
  author = {Mike Steel and Michael J. Sanderson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.4875},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

6 pages, 1 figure

R2 v1 2026-06-21T13:18:10.427Z