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Understanding phylogenies
Understanding a phylogeny is a lot like reading a family tree.
The root of the tree represents the ancestral lineage, and the tips of
the branches represent the descendants of that ancestor. As you move
from the root to the tips, you are moving forward in time.

When a lineage
splits (speciation), it is represented as branching on a phylogeny.
When a speciation event occurs, a single ancestral lineage gives rise to
two or more daughter lineages.

Phylogenies trace patterns of shared ancestry
between lineages. Each lineage has a part of its history that is unique
to it alone and parts that are shared with other lineages.

Similarly, each lineage has ancestors that are unique to that lineage and ancestors that are shared with other lineages — common ancestors.
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