Am working with genome sequences of A. thaliana species - and trying to derive the sequence of the recent ancestor of A.thaliana.
Looking at the consensus of multiple Thaliana strains at a given position and comparing it to that of Lyrata I can think of some possibilities to determine the base of the recent ancestor of A.thaliana.
I am looking for some feedback from the community, leads to literature that use algorithms to identify not the most recent common ancestor but the just the recent ancestor of the species.
What I have been thinking is A.thaliana & A.lyrata would have a recent common ancestor while I am more inclined to know the ancestor of A.thaliana - so it shouldn't be 'common' - perhaps there's another apt word for it.
It's not clear to me what you mean by recent ancestor as opposed to recent common ancestor. Isn't an ancestor of a particular species not always common to this species and another species?
It should be recent common ancestor - for the multiple strains of Thaliana it is a 'recent common ancestor'