\name{ltt.plot} \alias{ltt.plot} \alias{ltt.lines} \alias{mltt.plot} \title{Lineages Through Time Plot} \usage{ ltt.plot(phy, xlab = "Time", ylab = "N", ...) ltt.lines(phy, ...) mltt.plot(phy, ..., dcol = TRUE, dlty = FALSE, legend = TRUE, xlab = "Time", ylab = "N", log = "") } \arguments{ \item{phy}{an object of class \code{"phylo"}; this could be an object of class \code{"multiPhylo"} in the case of \code{mltt.plot}.} \item{xlab}{a character string (or a variable of mode character) giving the label for the x-axis (default is "Time").} \item{ylab}{idem for the y-axis (default is "N").} \item{\dots}{in the cases of \code{ltt.plot()} and \code{ltt.lines()} these are further (graphical) arguments to be passed to \code{plot()} or \code{lines()}, respectively (see \code{Details:} on how to transform the axes); in the case \code{mltt.plot()} these are additional trees to be plotted (see \code{Details:}).} \item{dcol}{a logical specifying whether the different curves should be differentiated with colors (default is \code{TRUE}).} \item{dlty}{a logical specifying whether the different curves should be differentiated with patterns of dots and dashes (default is \code{FALSE}).} \item{legend}{a logical specifying whether a legend should be plotted.} \item{log}{a character string specifying which axis(es) to be log-transformed; must be one of the followings: \code{""}, \code{"x"}, \code{"y"}, or \code{"xy"}.} } \description{ These functions plot, on the current graphical device, the minimum numbers of lineages through time from phylogenetic trees. } \details{ \code{ltt.plot} does a simple lineages through time (LTT) plot. Additional arguments (\code{...}) may be used to change, for instance, the limits on the axes (with \code{xlim} and/or \code{ylim}) or other graphical settings (\code{col} for the color, \code{lwd} for the line thickness, \code{lty} for the line type may be useful; see \code{\link[graphics]{par}} for an exhaustive listing of graphical parameters). The \eqn{y}-axis can be log-transformed by adding the following option: \code{log = "y"}. \code{ltt.lines} adds a LTT curve to an existing plot. Additional arguments (\code{...}) may be used to change the settings of the added line. Of course, the settings of the already existing LTT plot cannot be altered this way. \code{mltt.plot} does a multiple LTT plot taking as arguments one or several trees. These trees may be given as objects of class \code{"phylo"} (single trees) or \code{"multiPhylo"} (multiple trees). Any number of objects may be given. This function is mainly for exploratory analyses with the advantages that the axes are set properly to view all lines, and the legend is plotted by default. For more flexible settings of line drawings, it is probably better to combine \code{ltt.plot()} with successive calls of \code{ltt.lines()} (see \code{Examples:}). } \references{ Harvey, P. H., May, R. M. and Nee, S. (1994) Phylogenies without fossils. \emph{Evolution}, \bold{48}, 523--529. Nee, S., Holmes, E. C., Rambaut, A. and Harvey, P. H. (1995) Inferring population history from molecular phylogenies. \emph{Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences}, \bold{349}, 25--31. } \author{Emmanuel Paradis \email{Emmanuel.Paradis@mpl.ird.fr}} \seealso{ \code{\link{skyline}}, \code{\link{branching.times}}, \code{\link{birthdeath}}, \code{\link{bd.ext}}, \code{\link{yule.cov}} \code{\link[graphics]{plot}} for the basic plotting function in R } \examples{ data(bird.families) data(bird.orders) opar <- par(mfrow = c(2, 1)) ltt.plot(bird.families) title("Lineages Through Time Plot of the Bird Families") ltt.plot(bird.families, log = "y") title(main = "Lineages Through Time Plot of the Bird Families", sub = "(with logarithmic transformation of the y-axis)") par(opar) ### to plot the tree and the LTT plot together layout(matrix(1:4, 2, 2)) plot(bird.families, show.tip.label = FALSE) ltt.plot(bird.families, main = "Bird families") plot(bird.orders, show.tip.label = FALSE) ltt.plot(bird.orders, main = "Bird orders") layout(matrix(1)) mltt.plot(bird.families, bird.orders) ### Generates 10 random trees with 23 tips: TR <- replicate(10, rcoal(23), FALSE) ### Give names to each tree: names(TR) <- paste("random tree", 1:10) ### And specify the class of the list so that mltt.plot() ### does not trash it! class(TR) <- "multiPhylo" mltt.plot(TR, bird.orders) ### And now for something (not so) completely different: ltt.plot(bird.orders, lwd = 2) for (i in 1:10) ltt.lines(TR[[i]], lty = 2) legend(-10, 5, lwd = c(2, 1), lty = c(1, 2), bty = "n", legend = c("Bird orders", "Random trees")) } \keyword{hplot} \keyword{aplot}