A reviewer has complained that my choice of outgroup in my phylogenetic tree may be causing long branch attraction. He/she has suggested rooting my tree with another species. I have chosen one which is basal to the rest of the species based on my first tree. Is this a good enough reason to use it as an outgroup in my new tree? I originaly chose the first outgroup because the fossil record shows that this species evolved before the others. But for my new choice of outgroup, I have nothing but a tree to base this on. Is that a valid reason to choose it as the new outgroup?
I agree with this. Two aspects to this question. 1: Yes, it is OK to choose another outgroup based on the tree structure (since the tree has been "polarized" already by the first one). To reduce the possibility of LBA, you need to break up the long branches with more taxon sampling or use a different phylogenetic model. You might be able to align more positions reliably if you remove the more distantly-related species, too.