Species tree phylogenetics of a clade of Cuban Anoles Seth Rudman
Introduction to Anolis Anolis sagrei, one of Cuba's most common species; Anolis vermiculatus, an aquatic species from western Cuba; Anolis barbatus, a strange Cuban species that feeds on snails; Anolis allisoni, another Cuban species; Anolis bartschi, a spectacular rock- dweller that lacks a dewlap; Anolis distichus, from Hispaniola; Anolis aliniger, a montane species from Hispaniola (center).
Introduction to Anolis Anolis sagrei, one of Cuba's most common species; Anolis vermiculatus, an aquatic species from western Cuba; Anolis barbatus, a strange Cuban species that feeds on snails; Anolis allisoni, another Cuban species; Anolis bartschi, a spectacular rock- dweller that lacks a dewlap; Anolis distichus, from Hispaniola; Anolis aliniger, a montane species from Hispaniola (center).
Ecomorphs
Anolis sagrei
Phylogenetics basics: a quick review
Making a Gene Tree 1) Collect tissue 2) Extract DNA and Sequence 1 mtDNA marker and 2 common nDNA markers
3) Align sequences and make a tree
Difficulties of Phylogenetics Conflicting gene histories Gene A reconstructs this topologyGene B reconstructs this topology
Difficulties of Phylogenetics Short distances between nodes
Problems encountered by my early trees…
Species Trees Helpful to imagine a gene tree as a tree contained within the true phylogeny. Think of a species tree as an aggregate of all gene trees.
What I’m doing now Re-sample characters to form smaller datasets and determine the importance of sampling many nuclear loci.