Learn R Programming

ape (version 5.5)

root: Roots Phylogenetic Trees

Description

root reroots a phylogenetic tree with respect to the specified outgroup or at the node specified in node.

unroot unroots a phylogenetic tree, or returns it unchanged if it is already unrooted.

is.rooted tests whether a tree is rooted.

Usage

root(phy, ...)
# S3 method for phylo
root(phy, outgroup, node = NULL, resolve.root = FALSE,
     interactive = FALSE, edgelabel = FALSE, ...)
# S3 method for multiPhylo
root(phy, outgroup, ...)

unroot(phy) # S3 method for phylo unroot(phy) # S3 method for multiPhylo unroot(phy)

is.rooted(phy) # S3 method for phylo is.rooted(phy) # S3 method for multiPhylo is.rooted(phy)

Arguments

phy

an object of class "phylo" or "multiPhylo".

outgroup

a vector of mode numeric or character specifying the new outgroup.

node

alternatively, a node number where to root the tree.

resolve.root

a logical specifying whether to resolve the new root as a bifurcating node.

interactive

if TRUE the user is asked to select the node by clicking on the tree which must be plotted.

edgelabel

a logical value specifying whether to treat node labels as edge labels and thus eventually switching them so that they are associated with the correct edges when using drawSupportOnEdges (see Czech et al. 2016).

arguments passed among methods (e.g., when rooting lists of trees).

Value

an object of class "phylo" or "multiPhylo" for root and unroot; a logical vector for is.rooted.

Details

The argument outgroup can be either character or numeric. In the first case, it gives the labels of the tips of the new outgroup; in the second case the numbers of these labels in the vector phy$tip.label are given.

If outgroup is of length one (i.e., a single value), then the tree is rerooted using the node below this tip as the new root.

If outgroup is of length two or more, the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of the ingroup is used as the new root. Note that the tree is unrooted before being rerooted, so that if outgroup is already the outgroup, then the returned tree is not the same than the original one (see examples). If outgroup is not monophyletic, the operation fails and an error message is issued.

If resolve.root = TRUE, root adds a zero-length branch below the MRCA of the ingroup.

A tree is considered rooted if either only two branches connect to the root, or if there is a root.edge element. In all other cases, is.rooted returns FALSE.

References

Czech, L., Huerta-Cepas, J. and Stamatakis, A. (2017) A critical review on the use of support values in tree viewers and bioinformatics toolkits. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 34, 1535--1542. 10.1093/molbev/msx055

See Also

bind.tree, drop.tip, nodelabels, identify.phylo

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
data(bird.orders)
plot(root(bird.orders, 1))
plot(root(bird.orders, 1:5))

tr <- root(bird.orders, 1)
is.rooted(bird.orders) # yes
is.rooted(tr)          # no
### This is because the tree has been unrooted first before rerooting.
### You can delete the outgroup...
is.rooted(drop.tip(tr, "Struthioniformes"))
### ... or resolve the basal trichotomy in two ways:
is.rooted(multi2di(tr))
is.rooted(root(bird.orders, 1, r = TRUE))
### To keep the basal trichotomy but forcing the tree as rooted:
tr$root.edge <- 0
is.rooted(tr)

x <- setNames(rmtree(10, 10), LETTERS[1:10])
is.rooted(x)
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab