The new SplitsTree App is designed as an open source project that provides a wide range of algorithms and processes for computing and working with both unrooted and rooted phylogenetic trees and networks. Much work has been invested in accommodating much larger datasets (more taxa, longer sequences, more trees, improved algorithms) than its predecessor programs, SplitsTree4 and Dendroscope3, and its user interface is based on the JavaFX library, giving it a modern look and feel.
As this is the sixth major reimplementation of SplitsTree, this is also known as SplitsTree6.
One main aim of this program is to make it easy to compute both trees and networks, hopefully encouraging researchers to use phylogenetic networks when appropriate. A second aim is to bring together the calculation of both unrooted and rooted trees and networks into one program. Moreover, the program explicitly supports the import and export of data in many different formats, making it easy to use the program in collaboration with other programs.
We are currently beta testing an iOS version... if you would like to try out SplitsTree on your iPad (or even iPhone ;-)), then please contact Daniel Huson for a link to Apple Testflight.
The user manual for this software is available online.
A key novel feature of the SplitsTree App is that all data, algorithms and parameters are explicitly modeled as a "workflow", that is, a graph that represents the provenance of a result. While a casual user will interact with the program via menu items and other controls, an advanced user can directly edit and interact with the workflow so as to setup an analysis that goes beyond the basic analyses offered by the program. Another novel feature of the program is that the workflow is analyzed so as to produce a textual representation of the analysis, together with all relevant citations, thus providing the framework for a "methods section" of a corresponding paper.
Any workflow can be saved to a file and then applied to other datasets either using SplitsTree App or using an accompanying command-line workflow runner program.
Our previous program, SplitsTree4, was designed for computing phylogenetic trees and networks from distances or aligned sequences. It was written in the early 2000's by Daniel Huson and Dave Bryant and described in (Huson and Bryant, 2006). While the program is still widely used and cited, it was designed for small datasets and the user interface, implemented using the Java Swing library, now feels minimalistic and dated. Moreover, SplitsTree4 was not designed as an open source program. (SplitsTree5 was our first attempt to rewrite SplitsTree4, however, some unfortunate early design decisions lead to code that was difficult to extend and so we have abandoned the development of Splitstree5. We consider it an evolutionary dead end).
While SplitsTree4 was designed for unrooted phylogenetic trees and networks, another previous program Dendroscope3 (Huson and Scornavacca, 2012) was designed for working with rooted trees and networks. This program, too, was designed for much smaller datasets than people work with today.
If you use SplitsTree App, the please cite this paper:
- Daniel H. Huson and David Bryant. The SplitsTree App: interactive analysis and visualization using phylogenetic trees and networks. Nature Methods (2024) https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-024-02406-3
Papers associated with older versions of SplitsTree:
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Daniel H. Huson and David Bryant, Application of Phylogenetic Networks in Evolutionary Studies, Molecular Biology and Evolution, 23(2):254-267 (2006) https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msj030
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Daniel H. Huson, SplitsTree: analyzing and visualizing evolutionary data, Bioinformatics, 14(1):68-73 (1998) https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/14.1.68