Is Congruence between Data Partitions a Reliable Predictor of Phylogenetic Accuracy? Empirically Testing an Iterative Procedure for Choosing among Phylogenetic Methods
Author(s) -
Cliff Cunningham
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
systematic biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.128
H-Index - 182
eISSN - 1076-836X
pISSN - 1063-5157
DOI - 10.1093/sysbio/46.3.464
Subject(s) - congruence (geometry) , phylogenetic tree , weighting , maximum parsimony , mathematics , biology , statistics , taxon , clade , paleontology , genetics , geometry , radiology , gene , medicine
The relationship between phylogenetic accuracy and congruence between data partitions collected from the same taxa was explored for mitochondrial DNA sequences from two well-supported vertebrate phylogenies. An iterative procedure was adopted whereby accuracy, phylogenetic signal, and congruence were measured before and after modifying a simple reconstruction model, equally weighted parsimony. These modifications included transversion parsimony, successive weighting, and six-parameter parsimony. For the data partitions examined, there is a generally positive relationship between congruence and phylogenetic accuracy. If congruence increased without decreasing resolution or phylogenetic signal, this increased congruence was a good predictor of accuracy. If congruence increased as a result of poor resolution, the degree of congruence was not a good predictor of accuracy. For all sets of data partitions, six-parameter parsimony methods show a consistently positive relationship between congruence and accuracy. Unlike successive weighting, six-parameter parsimony methods were not strongly influenced by the starting tree.
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