arXiv:2212.08145 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Cherry picking in forests: A new characterization for the unrooted hybrid number of two phylogenetic trees
Katharina T. Huber, Simone Linz, Vincent Moulton
Published 2022-12-15Version 1
Phylogenetic networks are a generalization of phylogenetic trees that are used to model non-treelike evolutionary processes such as recombination and hybridization. In this paper, we consider unrooted phylogenetic networks, i.e. simple, connected graphs N=(V,E) with leaf set X, for X some set of species, in which every internal vertex in N has degree three. One approach used to construct such phylogenetic networks is to take as input a collection P of phylogenetic trees and to look for a network N that contains each tree in P and that minimizes the quantity r(N) = |E|-(|V|-1) over all such networks. Such a network always exists, and the quantity r(N) for an optimal network N is called the hybrid number of P. In this paper, we give a new characterization for the hybrid number in case P consists of two trees. This characterization is given in terms of a cherry picking sequence for the two trees, although to prove that our characterization holds we need to define the sequence more generally for two forests. Cherry picking sequences have been intensively studied for collections of rooted phylogenetic trees, but our new sequences are the first variant of this concept that can be applied in the unrooted setting. Since the hybrid number of two trees is equal to the well-known tree bisection and reconnect distance between the two trees, our new characterization also provides an alternative way to understand this important tree distance.