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Fig. 1 | Genome Biology

Fig. 1

From: The whole genome sequence of the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann), reveals insights into the biology and adaptive evolution of a highly invasive pest species

Fig. 1

Genome-wide phylogenomics and orthology. The phylogenetic relationship of C. capitata and 13 species in Arthropoda was estimated using a maximum likelihood analysis of a concatenation of 2591 single-copy orthologous protein sequences, 1000 bootstrap replicates, and rooted with D. pulex. The scale bar represents 0.1 amino acid substitution per site and the asterisks represent nodes with a bootstrap value of 100. Horizontal bars for each species show the absolute number of proteins that are: single-copy orthologs in all species, present in all species (not necessarily in single-copy), present in the majority of species in the analysis, present in a minority of the species (patchy distribution) in the analysis, and unique to the species. Species/strain designations are: Acyrthosiphon pisum (AcP), Aedes aegypti (strain Liverpool) (AeA), Anopheles gambiae (strain PEST) (AnG), Apis mellifera (ApM), Bombyx mori (BoM), Ceratitis capitata (CeC), Cimex lectularius (CiL), Culex quinquefasciatus (strain Johannesburg) (CuQ), Daphnia pulex (DaP), Drosophila melanogaster (DrM), Manduca sexta (MaS), Musca domestica (MuD), Pediculus humanus (PeH), Solenopsis invicta (SoI), and Tribolium castaneum (TrC)

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