Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5896353 | Zoologischer Anzeiger - A Journal of Comparative Zoology | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Although most phylogenetic investigations are motivated by questions about the evolution of morphological attributes, morphological data are increasingly rare as a source of characters for reconstructing phylogeny, in part because these attributes are time consuming to collect. Here we describe methods to mine the information contained in classifications as a source of phylogenetic characters, using the classification of actiniarian sea anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa) as our exemplar system. Our natural language processing pipeline recovers more than 400 characters in the most widely-used classification of sea anemones. However, the majority of these are problematic, reflecting semantic or logical inconsistencies or being scored for only a single taxon and thus inappropriate for phylogenetic reconstruction. Although the classification cannot be directly translated into a phylogenetic matrix, the exposure of the characters that underlie a classification provide important perspective into the basis and limits of a classification system and offer a valuable starting point for the creation of a phylogenetic matrix.