Root System Markup Language: Toward a Unified Root Architecture Description Language
Author(s) -
Guillaume Lobet,
Michael P. Pound,
Julien Diener,
Christophe Pradal,
Xavier Draye,
Christophe Godin,
Mathieu Javaux,
Daniel Leitner,
Félicien Meunier,
Philippe Nacry,
Tony Pridmore,
Andrea Schnepf
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.114.253625
Subject(s) - computer science , xml , markup language , software portability , root (linguistics) , interoperability , java , workflow , software , python (programming language) , metadata , programming language , world wide web , database , linguistics , philosophy
The number of image analysis tools supporting the extraction of architectural features of root systems has increased in recent years. These tools offer a handy set of complementary facilities, yet it is widely accepted that none of these software tools is able to extract in an efficient way the growing array of static and dynamic features for different types of images and species. We describe the Root System Markup Language (RSML), which has been designed to overcome two major challenges: (1) to enable portability of root architecture data between different software tools in an easy and interoperable manner, allowing seamless collaborative work; and (2) to provide a standard format upon which to base central repositories that will soon arise following the expanding worldwide root phenotyping effort. RSML follows the XML standard to store two- or three-dimensional image metadata, plant and root properties and geometries, continuous functions along individual root paths, and a suite of annotations at the image, plant, or root scale at one or several time points. Plant ontologies are used to describe botanical entities that are relevant at the scale of root system architecture. An XML schema describes the features and constraints of RSML, and open-source packages have been developed in several languages (R, Excel, Java, Python, and C#) to enable researchers to integrate RSML files into popular research workflow.
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