Towards an accurate and efficient heuristic for species/gene tree co-estimation.
Journal:
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England)
Published Date:
Sep 1, 2018
Abstract
MOTIVATION: Species and gene trees represent how species and individual loci within their genomes evolve from their most recent common ancestors. These trees are central to addressing several questions in biology relating to, among other issues, species conservation, trait evolution and gene function. Consequently, their accurate inference from genomic data is a major endeavor. One approach to their inference is to co-estimate species and gene trees from genome-wide data. Indeed, Bayesian methods based on this approach already exist. However, these methods are very slow, limiting their applicability to datasets with small numbers of taxa. The more commonly used approach is to first infer gene trees individually, and then use gene tree estimates to infer the species tree. Methods in this category rely significantly on the accuracy of the gene trees which is often not high when the dataset includes closely related species.