How much information is there for inferring species trees?

preprint OA: closed
Full text JSON View at publisher
Full text 854 characters · extracted from oa-doi-fallback · click to expand
Abstract As modern phylogenomics datasets become increasingly large, it is useful to develop recommendations for how to subsample datasets for best species tree inference. Here we apply a new measure of phylogenetic information content that estimates the reduction in tree space occupied by a posterior sample of inferred trees relative to a prior sample in order to assess the effects of gene tree parameters on species tree estimation. We find that, consistent with earlier studies, when data are informative, more data result in better species tree inference. However, when data are uninformative, subsampling a dataset to include only the most informative loci may produce a better species tree sample. We perform analyses on a variety of simulated and empirical datasets. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below. Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy (via DOI) is the canonical version.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Ask this paper AI returns verbatim quotes from the full text · source: oa-doi-fallback

Answers must be backed by verbatim quotes from this paper's full text. Hallucinated quotes are dropped automatically; if no verbatim passage answers the question, we say so. How this works

Citation neighborhood (no data yet)

We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. This is a recent paper (2026) — citers typically take a year or two to land, and the OpenAlex reference graph may still be filling in.

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00