Forest-based networks
Katharina T. Huber, Vincent Moulton, Guillaume E. Scholz

TL;DR
This paper introduces forest-based phylogenetic networks, a new model for representing complex evolutionary histories involving gene transfer between different lineages, extending existing tree-based models.
Contribution
It defines the concept of forest-based networks, explores their mathematical properties, and relates them to other phylogenetic network classes, providing a foundation for new evolutionary models.
Findings
Introduced forest-based phylogenetic networks as a new model.
Characterized special classes of forest-based networks.
Explored relationships with existing phylogenetic network classes.
Abstract
In evolutionary studies it is common to use phylogenetic trees to represent the evolutionary history of a set of species. However, in case the transfer of genes or other genetic information between the species or their ancestors has occurred in the past, a tree may not provide a complete picture of their history. In such cases,tree-based phylogenetic networks can provide a useful, more refined representation of the species evolution. Such a network is essentially a phylogenetic tree with some arcs added between the tree edges so as to represent reticulate events such as gene transfer. Even so, this model does not permit the representation of evolutionary scenarios where reticulate events have taken place between different subfamilies or lineages of species. To represent such scenarios, in this paper we introduce the notion of a forest-based phylogenetic network, that is, a collection of…
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