What Is A Good Phylogenetic Tree Viewer, Such That I Can View Internal Nodes?
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13.8 years ago
Lee Katz ★ 3.2k

What is a good phylogenetic tree viewer, such that I can view internal nodes? I have run a script to name internal nodes according to their descendants. My goal is to find internal nodes with homogeneous descendants. I would like to do this by eye but the phylogenetic tree viewers I have tried do not have options, or at the least obvious options, to display these internal node names. I have already tried Mega, Dendroscope, and DNAstar. Any other options?

Alternatively, does anyone have a good script to collapse a large (N>1500) tree according to the leaves naming scheme? My end goal is to cluster the tree as best as possible automatically. Thank you.

phylogenetics tree visualization clustering • 6.1k views
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This thread As Dendroscope does not work for you, try FigTree and Archaeopteryx.

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I use seaview, ete2 and iTol.

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13.8 years ago

tree viewers have been discussed around here a few times before, so you can even try browsing BioStar for such information. my personal option, and I should say that I'm not a phylogenetic-centered bioinformatician, would be Archaeopteryx (what a name!), the successor to ATV based on the forester libraries. it is the sugested interface for the phyloxml syntax, which I have found great to represent any tree I have had to deal with.

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+1 for Archaeopteryx.

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It worked, thanks! I can view internal node names now.

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I fixed the link to Archaeopteryx, which was no longer working.

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13.7 years ago
Michael 55k

Have a look at Epos, it is a Java library and application that can do a lot of weird things with phylogenies, multiple alignments and trees. Among other things it can display a tree with inner node labels. The search function allows to search for all node names and matching subtrees can be highlighted. If it can handle a large tree like yours could be worth a try.

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13.7 years ago

See this What phylogeny viewing software do you use? . It asks a similar question and/or the links provided therein could allow you to do what you need. I would also look at the links provided in Roderic Page's blog, iPhylo. Phyloviewer and Topiary Explorer are two viewers that you should check.

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