English

Can Multiple Phylogenetic Trees Be Displayed in a Tree-Child Network Simultaneously?

Populations and Evolution 2022-07-07 v1

Abstract

A binary phylogenetic network on a taxon set XX is a rooted acyclic digraph in which the degree of each nonleaf node is three and its leaves (i.e.degree-one nodes) are uniquely labeled with the taxa of XX. It is tree-child if each nonleaf node has at least one child of indegree one. A set of binary phylogenetic trees may or may not be simultaneously displayed in a binary tree-child network. Necessary conditions for multiple phylogenetic trees being simultaneously displayed in a tree-child network are given here. In particular, it is proved that any two phylogenetic trees can always simultaneously be displayed in some tree-child network on the same taxa set. It is also proved that any set of multiple binary phylogenetic trees can always simultaneously be displayed in some non-binary tree-child network on the same taxa set, where each nonleaf node is of either indegree one and outdegree two or indegree at least two and outdegree out.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2207.02629,
  title  = {Can Multiple Phylogenetic Trees Be Displayed in a Tree-Child Network Simultaneously?},
  author = {Yufeng Wu and Louxin Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.02629},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

17 pages, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-24T12:15:49.336Z