taxadb
relies on a set of pre-assembled tables following
a set of standardized schema layouts using Darwin Core vocabulary, as
outlined below. The database dumps provided by providers supported in
taxadb
at this time are:
taxadb abbreviation |
name |
---|---|
itis |
The Integrated Taxonomic Information System,
https://www.itis.gov/ |
col |
The Catalogue of Life |
ncbi |
The National Center for Biotechnology Information |
gbif |
The Global Biodiversity Information Facility |
tpl |
The Plant List |
fb |
FishBase |
slb |
SeaLifeBase |
wd |
WikiData, (wikidata.org) |
iucn |
The IUCN Red List of endangered species status,
https://www.iucnredlist.org |
ott |
Open Tree of Life taxonomy. |
Please Note: taxadb
advises
against uncritically combining data from multiple providers. The same
name is frequently used by different providers to mean different things
– some providers consider two names synonyms that other providers
consider distinct species. It is crucial to recognize that taxonomic
name providers represent independent taxonomic theories, and not
merely additional observations of the same immutable reality (Franz
& Sterner (2018)). You cannot just merge two databases of
taxonomic names like you can two databases of, say, plant traits to get
a bigger and more complete sample, because the former can contain
meaningful contradictions.
At the same time, it is also important to note that col
,
gbif
, ott
, are explicitly synthesis projects
integrating the databases of names from a range of (many) other
providers, while itis
, iucn
,
ncbi
, tpl
, fb
, and
slb
are independent name providers. The synthetic or
integrated name lists are not simple merges, but the product of
considerably expert opinion, and occasional nonsense automation. As
such, they too represent novel (justified or otherwise) assertions of
taxonomy, and are in no way a complete substitute for the databases they
integrate, owing to both differences in how up-to-date the relative
records are as well as to either expert disagreements or algorithmic
miss-matches. taxadb
makes no attempt to provide an opinion
or reconciliation mechanism to any of these issues, but only to provide
convenient access to data and functions for manipulating these records
in a fast and consistent manner. (In fact, it is easy to use
taxadb
to verify that many of the names recognized in, say,
ITIS, are not in fact included at all in Catalogue of Life or other
databases that claim to derive from ITIS).
These providers also distribute taxonomic data in a wide range of
database formats using a wide range of data layouts (schemas), not all
of which are particularly easy to use or interpret (e.g. hierarchies are
often but not always specified in taxon_id,parent_id
pairs.) To make it faster and easier to work across these providers,
taxadb
defines a common set of table schemas outlined below
that are particularly suited for efficient computation of common tasks.
The taxadb
format follows a strict interpretation of a
subset of Darwin Core.
taxadb
pre-processes and publicly archives compressed, flat
tables corresponding to each of these schema for each of these
providers. The providers vary widely in the frequency at which they
update their records, as well as whether they provide immutable
versioned releases (e.g. col
, ott
), direct
access to a database that is updated on a dynamic/continual basis
without any log of the changes (itis
, ncbi
,
others), or is simply unknown. The taxadb
maintainers take
semi-annual snapshots and distribute versioned releases of the
underlying data.
Most common operations can be expressed in terms of standard database
operations, such as simple filtering joins in SQL. To implement these,
taxadb
imports the compressed flat files into a local,
column-oriented database, which can be installed entirely as an R
package with no additional server setup required. This provides a
persistent store, and ensures that operations can be performed on disk
since the taxonomic tables considered here are frequently too large to
store in active memory. The columnar structure enables blazingly fast
joins. Once the database is created, taxadb
simply wraps a
set of user-friendly R functions around common SQL
queries,
implemented in the popular dplyr
syntax. By default,
taxadb
will always collect the results of these queries to
return familiar, in-memory objects to the R user. Optional arguments
allow more direct access the database queries.
taxadb
relies on the Simple Darwin Core Namespace for
Taxon objects, http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/ [@dwc]. This is the mostly widely recognized
format for exchange of taxonomic information.
taxonID
: a unique id for the name (including provider
prefix). Note that some providers do not assign IDs to synonyms, but
only to accepted names. In this case, the taxonID
should be
NA
, and the ID to the accepted name should be specified in
acceptedNameUsageID
.scientificName
: a Latin name, either accepted or known
synonym, at the lowest resolved level for the taxon. While DWC
encourages the use of authorship citations, these are intentionally
omitted in most tables as inconsistency in abbreviations and formatting
make names with authors much harder to resolve. When available, this
information is provided in the additional optional columns using the
corresponding Darwin Core terms. Please note:
scientificName
includes names at all taxonomic rank levels,
it does not mean just “genus + specific epithet”. For example,
“Animalia” is also a scientific name. The taxonRank
column
indicates the associated taxonomic rank.taxonRank
: the rank (as given by the provider) of this
taxon. Please note: While DarwinCore specifies seven
ranks as separate columns (see below), many providers recognize many
more of possible taxonRank
values, such as “superclass”,
“superorder.” For example, NCBI (ncbi
) and OpenTree
Taxonomy (ott
) recognize over 40 different ranks, many of
which are unnamed, while Catalogue of Life (col
), GBIF an
others recognize only the seven principle ranks. Conflicting claims
between naming providers about what rank a given name belongs to or what
species are included in which rank are common.acceptedNameUsageID
the accepted identifier. For
synonyms, the scientificName of the row with the corresponding
taxonID
gives the accepted name, according to the data
provider in question. For accepted names, this is identical to the
taxonID
for the name. If not provided, it is assumed this
is the same as the taxonID
.taxonomicStatus
Either “accepted”, for an accepted
scientific name, or a term indicating if the name is a known synonym,
common misspelling, etc.Some providers may report additional optional columns, see below.
Darwin Core defines several commonly recognized ranks as possible
Taxon properties as well: kingdom
, phylum
,
class
, order
, family
,
genus
, specificEpithet
, and
intraspecificEpithet
. Additionally, the taxonomic rank of
any scientific name can be specified under taxonRank
,
whether or not it is one of these names.
Semantically (specifically in the RDF sense), treating ranks as
properties seems somewhat crude. Database providers (and thus different
experts) disagree both about what rank levels they recognize and what
names belong in what ranks. NCBI recognizes over 40 named ranks and
numerous unnamed ranks. OTT, in true cladistic fashion, identifies all
mammals as being not only in the class “Mammalia”, but also in the
“class” of lobe-finned-fish, Sarcopterygii. To distinguish between these
different treatments, it would be semantically most consistent to
associate a (or multiple) taxonRankID
with each taxonomic
entry, rather than a a taxonRank. This ID could be specific to the data
provider, and indicate the rank name that provider associates with that
rank. Few (wikidata, with its strong RDF roots, is an exception)
providers associate IDs with rank levels though.
In practice, treating ranks as properties (i.e. as column headings) is far more consistent with typical scientific usage and convenient for common applications, such as generating a list of all birds or all frogs by a simple filter on names in a column.
The taxonomicStatus
value indicates if the name provided
is a synonym, misspelling or an accepted name. taxadb
does
not enforce any controlled vocabulary on the use of these terms beyond
using the term accepted
to indicate that the
scientificName
is an accepted name (i.e. the
dwc:acceptedNameUsage
) for the taxon. Including both
accepted names and synonyms in the scientificName
column
greatly facilitates taxonomic name resolution: a user can just perform
an SQL filtering join from a given list of names and the taxadb table in
order to resolve names to identifiers
(acceptedNameUsageID
s).
Common names are available from several providers, but tidy tables
for taxadb
have not yet been implemented. Common names
tables are expected to follow the following schema:
id
The taxonomic identifier for the species (or
possibly other rank)name
The common name / vernacular namelanguage
The language in which the common name is
given, if known. (all lowercase)language_code
the two-letter language code.taxadb
tables can easily be interpreted as semantic data
and will be made available as RDF triples. This permits the richer
SPARQL-based queries of taxonomic information, in addition to the
SQL-based queries. This data format will be the focus of a separate R
package interface taxald
.
ITIS:
, GBIF:
, etc.A set of R scripts for pre-processing data from each of the names
providers is included in the source code of taxadb
, in the
data-raw/
sub-directory. These scripts automate the process
from download to generation of the cached copy accessed by the package.
While specific processing steps vary across providers, the most of the
scripts focus on extracting a variety of formats (mostly SQLite and
various text formats) and combining tables into a consistent
implementation of Darwin Core following the schema and conventions
outlined above, and writing this data out as compressed (bz2)
tab-separated value files – a cross-platform standard format that
requires little specialized software to work with. Metadata regarding
the provenance of each data file are also provided, including sha256
hashes of raw data (uncompressed data) are generated for cryptographic
verification of data integrity.
The above scripts are intended to be rerun annually to generate
updated snapshots of the each of the data providers. Each snapshot is
then distributed as described above, as a separate cache release. All
taxadb
functions interacting with the provided taxonomic
names data can specify which version (year) snapshot should be used,
which facilitates reproducibility and easy comparisons across versions.
The scripts required to generate the data may be adjusted as needed if
any of the naming providers change there own format over time.
Additional names providers may be added as opportunity presents.