- 
							
								Mikio Kano
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Kenta Ozeki
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Kazuhiro Suzuki
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Masao Tsugaki
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Tomoki Yamashita
							
              						
 
									
			
																												
							
									
				
										Keywords:
				
				
																		spanning tree, 													spanning $k$-tree, 													bipartite graph															
			
			
										
					
Abstract
					A tree is called a $k$-tree if its maximum degree is at most $k$. We prove the following theorem. Let $k \geq 2$ be an integer, and $G$ be a connected bipartite graph with bipartition $(A,B)$ such that $|A| \le |B| \le (k-1)|A|+1$. If $\sigma_k(G) \ge |B|$, then $G$ has a spanning $k$-tree, where $\sigma_k(G)$ denotes the minimum degree sum of $k$ independent vertices of $G$. Moreover, the condition on $\sigma_k(G)$ is sharp. It was shown by Win (Abh. Math. Sem. Univ. Hamburg, 43, 263–267, 1975) that if a connected graph $H$ satisfies $\sigma_k(H) \ge |H|-1$, then $H$ has a spanning $k$-tree. Thus our theorem shows that the condition becomes much weaker if the graph is bipartite.