Hi everyone,
I'm trying to estimate divergence times within a clade that includes no extant species (the youngest representatives are 66 Ma old) using BEAST 2.4.8 plus the MM and SA packages, and I've been wondering how to best assign hyperpriors to the Fossilized Birth-Death model. Most studies (in fact, all I've been able to find so far) seem to condition the model on rho, but these usually include a mix of extinct and extant species. There also appear to be several conflicting interpretations of rho in use. Going back to Gavryushkina et al. 2014 (p. 4, eq. 2), rho is described as the probability of sampling at t = 0. However, should the t here be interpreted as root height, or rather as absolute time? Currently, I'm considering the following options:
(1) Condition on sampling rather than rho and estimate the latter (then again, what would that estimate mean?)
(2) Condition on rho and set it to 0, since the clade in question has no extant representatives
(3) Condition on rho and set it to my best estimate of the probability of sampling at 66 Ma
Which one of these would be the most appropriate?
A related question is whether I should condition the FBD process on the root or on the origin, since this is often discussed in terms of allowing fossils to be placed in the stem group of the clade formed by all extant tips included in the analysis. However, my analysis doesn't have any extant taxa in it, so the stem/crown distinction doesn't apply. I'd like to be able to allow for the possibility that the root is a sampled ancestor, but on the other hand, I have no good prior to place on the time of origin other than the age of the oldest fossil in the dataset.
Thanks,
David