Gene Tree Estimation Error with Ultraconserved Elements: An Empirical Study on Pseudapis Bees

Author:

Bossert Silas123,Murray Elizabeth A23,Pauly Alain4,Chernyshov Kyrylo5,Brady Seán G2,Danforth Bryan N1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Comstock Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

2. Department of Entomology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560, USA

3. Department of Entomology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164, USA

4. O.D. Taxonomy and Phylogeny, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Rue Vautier 29, 1000 Brussels, Belgium

5. College of Arts and Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

Abstract

Abstract Summarizing individual gene trees to species phylogenies using two-step coalescent methods is now a standard strategy in the field of phylogenomics. However, practical implementations of summary methods suffer from gene tree estimation error, which is caused by various biological and analytical factors. Greatly understudied is the choice of gene tree inference method and downstream effects on species tree estimation for empirical data sets. To better understand the impact of this method choice on gene and species tree accuracy, we compare gene trees estimated through four widely used programs under different model-selection criteria: PhyloBayes, MrBayes, IQ-Tree, and RAxML. We study their performance in the phylogenomic framework of $>$800 ultraconserved elements from the bee subfamily Nomiinae (Halictidae). Our taxon sampling focuses on the genus Pseudapis, a distinct lineage with diverse morphological features, but contentious morphology-based taxonomic classifications and no molecular phylogenetic guidance. We approximate topological accuracy of gene trees by assessing their ability to recover two uncontroversial, monophyletic groups, and compare branch lengths of individual trees using the stemminess metric (the relative length of internal branches). We further examine different strategies of removing uninformative loci and the collapsing of weakly supported nodes into polytomies. We then summarize gene trees with ASTRAL and compare resulting species phylogenies, including comparisons to concatenation-based estimates. Gene trees obtained with the reversible jump model search in MrBayes were most concordant on average and all Bayesian methods yielded gene trees with better stemminess values. The only gene tree estimation approach whose ASTRAL summary trees consistently produced the most likely correct topology, however, was IQ-Tree with automated model designation (ModelFinder program). We discuss these findings and provide practical advice on gene tree estimation for summary methods. Lastly, we establish the first phylogeny-informed classification for Pseudapis s. l. and map the distribution of distinct morphological features of the group. [ASTRAL; Bees; concordance; gene tree estimation error; IQ-Tree; MrBayes, Nomiinae; PhyloBayes; RAxML; phylogenomics; stemminess]

Funder

U.S. National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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