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Tangled Trees: The Challenge of Inferring Species Trees from Coalescent and Non-Coalescent Genes

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2012

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Humana Press
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Anderson, Christian
 N.K., 
Liang 
Liu,
 Dennis
 Pearl 
and 
Scott 
V. 
Edwards. 2012. Tangled Trees: The Challenge of Inferring Species Trees from Coalescent and Non-Coalescent Genes. In Evolutionary Genomics: Statistical and Computational Methods, Volume 2, ed. Maria Anisimova, 3-28. New York: Humana Press.

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Abstract

Phylogenies based on different genes can produce conflicting phylogenies; methods that resolve such ambiguities are becoming more popular, and offer a number of advantages for phylogenetic analysis. We review so-called species tree methods and the biological forces that can undermine them by violating important aspects of the underlying models. Such forces include horizontal gene transfer, gene duplication, and natural selection. We review ways of detecting loci influenced by such forces and offer suggestions for identifying or accommodating them. The way forward involves identifying outlier loci, as is done in population genetic analysis of neutral and selected loci, and removing them from further analysis, or developing more complex species tree models that can accommodate such loci.

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Species tree, Gene tree discordance, Non-coalescent genes, Outlier analysis

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