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Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition

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Author - Barry G. Hall ... [Goo?] [Posters]

This Paperback Book item from Sinauer Associates, Inc. was reviewed on 6-Nov-2008.

Search ISBN:0878933107 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition Reference Book. Classifications : General AAS Computer Science New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General AAS Biology & Life Sciences Science & Mathematics New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Boo . Click the following link to view the cover of Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition.

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1) Paperback Book Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition by Sinauer Associates, Inc.. Easy to understand and use, even if you are still learning english. Every step to make a phylogenetic tree is explained in such a way that is easy to work with your own data set. It contains background about molecular phylogeny.. Recomended.¤

2) Paperback Book Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition by Sinauer Associates, Inc.. I have to say this is a great book. I construct phylogenetic trees all the time, and this book not only can be used as a working manual, but also delivers basic background information. Plus, it was such a pleasue to read, as the author made every point clear and logic. The only thing I would suggest is that maybe the author can introduce several more programs in the next edition, such as PAUP, mafft, muscles, etc. All in all, it is Absolutely Excellent.¤

3) Paperback Book Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition by Sinauer Associates, Inc.. Buy this if you must but there is a third edition. They complement each other to some extent but the third edition is more useful as it is more up to date and even slimmer and yet more powerful in that it totally obviates the need to pour over Paup. Here is a good treatment of Paup. Wonderful for beginners.

Review for the 3rd Edition (as Amazon only allow one review per set) - I now give it 5 stars and a title would be: Buy it, Do it ... or something similar.

Shortly after I got the second edition, I got the third. Within the covers of this slim volume is all the information you will need to generate the most elaborate hypotheses you may dare to venture on the basis of all the hard work you may have put into obtaining a data set of protein or DNA sequences.

The chapters are clearly laid out and this is a cook book - you can follow the instructions chapter by chapter using freely available software that it recommends. All the way from organizing your data, making an alignment and turning this into a simple tree, to computing genetic distances and finally producing trees by Baysian Inference or Maximum Likelihood.

Within certain relevant chapters are essays explaining the mathematical bases of tree building, models employed and the various kinds of trees and how they are built up - chapters on Trees, Neighbour Joining, Maximum Parsimony, Maximum Likelihood, Baysian Inference and there are downloadable programs that work fine as per the instructions like Fas2PhyNex which instantly transforms your Fasta file format into a Phylip and Nexus format. This book is a treasure trove of such packages and the simplest available descriptions of the sort of work you´re up to at a level suitable for beginners and those with background (tells it to you straight without dumbing down). Those who go through your conclusions later may admire you for your profound understanding of the subject, on the basis of this book.

I feel the book could have tackled the following issues more clearly: 1. Establishing genetic distances for publications, uncorrected vs corrected - this book gives information on how to establish distances using the P distance model and the pairwise deletion option in MEGA - but I had to read further before realising it was sort of all there - but perhaps not emphasised enough (descriptions of new species frequently give uncorrected genetic distances at least). 2. Whether data from two different sequences for the same taxa should be combined to create a single data set for tree building, and when or when not to think about this (you can also make separate trees and combine them consensually). 3. What to do about gaps in the data - for example, I had several intact sequences of around 1kbp but a few were only 600bp - what problems would the shorter sequences cause? In the event, I had full and truncated data sets and trees for comparison. I found that having the odd short sequence was not too problematic - or at least, that´s how it appeared.

This book is almost perfect, but it should be supplemented if you´re a beginner (as with many books). I strongly recommend - Bioinformatics for Dummies. Using Bioinformatics, I realised that making alignments in T-coffee was better than using the MEGA multiple alignment system in terms of ironing out any errors that may be fiddly to correct by hand.

For information, whereas PHYML was superb for ML trees, I actually found that the ALRT bootstrap implementation just failed several times and went to use the traditional method. In a similar vein, I found the older versions of PHYML more effective that the latest, given sometimes the latest versions just did not deliver the goods.

I found that the author to be totally perspicacious and helpful and he has struggled so we don´t have to. He has been wise to create such a slim volume - to paraphrase from the Seven Pillars of Wisdom by TE Lawrence - A Triumph. With a little supplementary reading (as this book recommends, do read the bits of the Mr Bayes Manual and take other pointers into account) the book is a gem - well worth the small cost and saving in Library space. I certainly look forward to future editions without begging for them as this book is so good.

Followed it fairly religiously and I will owe my upcoming award of a PhD in part to this helpful manual/friend.¤

4) Paperback Book Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy: A How-to Manual, Third Edition by Sinauer Associates, Inc.. Phylogenetic Trees Made Easy helps the reader get started in creating phylogenetic trees from protein or nucleic acid sequence data. Although aimed at molecular and cell biologists, who may not be familiar with phylogenetic or evolutionary theory, it also serves students who may be familiar with phylogenetic theory but are unfamiliar with the tools used to apply that theory. The reader is led, step by step, through identifying sequences that are homologous to a sequence of interest, downloading these sequences from databases, creating multiple alignments, and using several different methods to construct trees. Learn More boxes present background on the various concepts and methods, and a website provides files needed for working through the tutorials in the text as well as additional software that facilitates some of the methods discussed. Key Changes to the Third Edition: * Over 90% of the text and screenshots are new. * A new program, MEGA, that has dramatically simplified and sped up the most tedious parts of making trees searching for and downloading sequences, aligning those sequences, and getting them into suitable formats is introduced as the primary tool for constructing trees. * PHYML, another new program that has sped up the Maximum Likelihood method by more than 100-fold, making it a practical alternative to other methods, is introduced. * Chapter 9 is devoted to a detailed method for reconstructing very ancient ancestral sequences, and software to facilitate that method is made available on the website. * Chapter 10 speaks to detecting adaptive evolution. * The final chapter comprises detailed instructions for working with programs on Macintosh, Windows, and Unix platforms.¤

Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 4-Dec-2008, 08789331079780878933105, 570-0X0-180-750-660-070-8


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