FIGURE 1. The phage proteomic tree.
From the following article:
Biodiversity and biogeography of phages in modern stromatolites and thrombolites
Christelle Desnues, Beltran Rodriguez-Brito, Steve Rayhawk, Scott Kelley, Tuong Tran, Matthew Haynes, Hong Liu, Mike Furlan, Linda Wegley, Betty Chau, Yijun Ruan, Dana Hall, Florent E. Angly, Robert A. Edwards, Linlin Li, Rebecca Vega Thurber, R. Pamela Reid, Janet Siefert, Valeria Souza, David L. Valentine, Brandon K. Swan, Mya Breitbart & Forest Rohwer
Nature 452, 340-343(20 March 2008)
doi:10.1038/nature06735

The tree (left) shows the similarities of the viral metagenomic sequences to completely sequenced phage genomes. The presence and abundance of phage reads (right; abundance is proportional to line length) are presented in green for Highborne Cay, red for Pozas Azules II, blue for Rio Mesquites and grey for the Sargasso Sea samples. The total number of reads with significant similarity to phages (plus and minus microphages) is also indicated for Highborne Cay and Pozas Azules II. The name of the phage associated with the most abundant reads of each metagenome is given as well as the percentage of the total represented by these reads.
