Asymptotic enumeration of normal and hybridization networks via tree decoration
Abstract
Phylogenetic networks provide a more general description of evolutionary relationships than rooted phylogenetic trees. One way to produce a phylogenetic network is to randomly place k arcs between the edges of a rooted binary phylogenetic tree with n leaves. The resulting directed graph may fail to be a phylogenetic network, and even when it is (and thereby a `tree-based' network), it may fail to be a tree-child or normal network. In this paper, we first show that if k is fixed, the proportion of arc placements that result in a normal network tends to 1 as n grows. From this result, the asymptotic enumeration of normal networks becomes straightforward and provides a transparent meaning to the combinatorial terms that arise. Moreover, the approach extends to allow k to grow with n (at the rate o(n13)), which was not handled in earlier work. We also investigate a subclass of normal networks of particular relevance in biology (hybridization networks) and establish that the same asymptotic results apply.
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