20 KiB
Darwin Core XML guide
- Title
- Darwin Core XML guide
- Date version issued
- 2015-06-02
- Date created
- 2009-02-12
- Part of TDWG Standard
- http://www.tdwg.org/standards/450/
- This version
- http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/guides/xml/2014-11-08
- Latest version
- http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/guides/xml/
- Previous version
- http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/guides/xml/2010-05-23
- Replaced by
- http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/guides/xml/2021-07-15
- Abstract
- Guidelines for the implementation of Darwin Core in XML.
- Contributors
- John Wieczorek (MVZ), Markus Döring (GBIF), Renato De Giovanni (CRIA), Tim Robertson (GBIF), Dave Vieglais (KUNHM)
- Creator
- Darwin Core Task Group
- Bibliographic citation
- Darwin Core Task Group. 2014. Darwin Core XML guide. Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG). http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/guides/xml/2014-11-08
1 Introduction
This document provides guidelines for implementing application schemas based on Darwin Core terms using XML. The underlying metadata model is described (in a syntax neutral way), followed by some specific guidelines for XML implementations. Some guidance on the use of non-Darwin Core terms is also provided.
This document does not provide guidelines for encoding Darwin Core in RDF/XML. Nor does it take a position on the relative merits of encoding metadata in "plain" XML rather than RDF/XML. This document provides guidelines in those cases where RDF/XML is not considered appropriate.
1.1 Status of the content of this document
All sections of this document are normative, except for sections that are explicitly marked as non-normative.
1.2 Audience
This document is targeted toward those who wish to use or construct application schemas using Darwin Core terms in XML. It includes explanations of existing schemas such as Simple Darwin Core and how to build new schemas to meet specific models of information.
2 Implementation guide
2.1 XML schema
Implementors should base their XML applications on XML Schemas rather than XML DTDs. Approaches based on XML Schemas are more flexible and are more easily re-used within other XML applications.
2.2 XML namespaces
Implementors should use XML Namespaces to uniquely identify elements. Darwin Core namespaces are defined in the Darwin Core Namespace Policy, while Dublin Core namespaces are defined in the DCMI Namespace Recommendation.
2.3 Abstract model
The Darwin Core follows the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative Abstract Model except that the Darwin Core record is roughly equivalent to the Dublin Core resource.
- Darwin Core terms are either
classes
orproperties
. - Each
property
has at most oneclass
as its domain (describes no more than oneclass
). - A
Darwin Core record
is made up of zero or moreclasses
and one or moreproperties
with their associatedvalues
. - Each
value
is a literal string. - The
values
ofproperties
within aDarwin Core record
describe that record. - A
Darwin Core record
must include all requiredproperties
, if any, and their associatedvalues
.
2.4 Properties and values
Darwin Core follows the guidelines for expressing Dublin Core metadata using XML except in that Darwin Core implementors should encode properties
as XML elements and values
as the content of those elements instead of having each property contain a value representation and its associated value. The name of the XML element should be an XML qualified name (QName), which associates the value given in the Term name
attribute in the Darwin Core Terms recommendation with the appropriate namespace name. For example, use:
<xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
targetNamespace="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/"
xmlns:dwc="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/">
...
<dwc:basisOfRecord>HumanObservation</dwc:basisOfRecord>
rather than:
<dwc:basisOfRecord value="HumanObservation"/>
2.5 Null values
Elements for which the value is null should be omitted from the document or explicitly coded using the attribute xsi:nil="true"
.
<dwc:locality xsi:nil="true"/>
Do not use an empty string - an element with no content:
<dwc:locality></dwc:locality>
2.6 Simple Darwin Core
Simple Darwin Core most closely models the "flat" nature of many data sets. It is a ready-made schema for sharing information with no structure beyond properties of a record (equivalent to fields in a table, or columns in a spreadsheet). It is meant to accommodate all properties except those that require further structure to be meaningful (auxilliary terms in the classes ResourceRelationship and MeasurementOrFact. The schema has no required terms and no term is repeated within a given record. Refer to Simple Darwin Core for the rationale behind this schema.
The term dcterms:type
(which is controlled by the Dublin Core Type Vocabulary), gives the basic category of object (PhysicalObject
, StillImage
, MovingImage
, Sound
, Text
) the record is about. The term basisOfRecord
, which has a controlled vocabulary distinct from that of dcterms:type
, shows the name of the Darwin Core class (e.g., LivingSpecimen
, PreservedSpecimen
, FossilSpecimen
, HumanObservation
, MachineObservation
, Taxon
) the record is about.
2.6.1 Simple Darwin Core example (non-normative)
Following is a brief example of an XML document for a single specimen complying with the Simple Darwin Core Schema]. The Simple Darwin Core XML example document (if this link shows a blank page in your browser, use the View Source option to see the XML document) shows detail for a single record having a more complete set of elements.
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dwr:SimpleDarwinRecordSet
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/xsd/simpledarwincore/ http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/xsd/tdwg_dwc_simple.xsd"
xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"
xmlns:dwc="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/"
xmlns:dwr="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/xsd/simpledarwincore/">
<dwr:SimpleDarwinRecord>
<dcterms:type>PhysicalObject</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-12T12:43:31</dcterms:modified>
<dcterms:rightsHolder>Museum of Vertebrate Zoology</dcterms:rightsHolder>
<dcterms:rights>Creative Commons License</dcterms:rights>
<dwc:institutionCode>MVZ</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>Mammals</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14523</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>PreservedSpecimen</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:country>Argentina</dwc:country>
<dwc:countryCode>AR</dwc:countryCode>
<dwc:stateProvince>Neuquén</dwc:stateProvince>
<dwc:locality>25 km al NNE de Bariloche por Ruta 40 (=237)</dwc:locality>
</dwr:SimpleDarwinRecord>
</dwr:SimpleDarwinRecordSet>
2.7 Classes and containment
Many Darwin Core terms (properties
) are defined as being associated with another term (a class
). For example, scientificName
and Taxon
are both Darwin Core terms, but scientificName
is a property associated with the Taxon
class. When constructing schemas that take advantage of classes in structures, implementors are encouraged to maintain the property/class relationships defined by the terms whenever possible (refer to the Class
attribute of the term as given in the Quick Reference Guide or the attribute dwcattributes:organizedInClass
in the term declaration in the dcterms.rdf
file. To promote reuse, Darwin Core provides a set of xml schemas to use as the basis of additional schemas:
- Terms XML Schema - property term definitions as typed global elements and named groups for all terms for a given class to be referenced. The schema makes use of substitution groups
anyClass
,anyProperty
,anyIdentifier
andanyXYZTerm
for each class, e.g.anyTaxonTerm
. This is the schema upon which the Simple Darwin Core XML Schema is based. - Class Terms XML Schema - class term definitions as typed global elements with subelements referencing all corresponding property terms via their substitution group.
It is encouraged to use classes in a normalized way to avoid deep nesting. A Darwin Core Tools and Applications page has been created as an index to example schemas for the purpose of community discussions and development. An XML schema is provided to freely mix any Darwin Core Class in a global list and allow them to reference each other using the respective class identifier terms.
2.7.1 Normalized classes examples (non-normative)
Following is an example of using normalized classes to represent two related specimen occurrences (one of which has had a second identification) at one location following this class-based schema. Note that you can reuse the location definition here by referring to it via locationID:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dwr:DarwinRecordSet
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/dwcrecord/ http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/xsd/tdwg_dwc_classes.xsd"
xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"
xmlns:dwc="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/"
xmlns:dwr="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/dwcrecord/">
<dcterms:Location>
<dwc:locationID>http://guid.mvz.org/sites/arg/127</dwc:locationID>
<dwc:country>Argentina</dwc:country>
<dwc:countryCode>AR</dwc:countryCode>
<dwc:stateProvince>Neuquén</dwc:stateProvince>
<dwc:locality>25 km al NNE de Bariloche por Ruta 40 (=237)</dwc:locality>
</dcterms:Location>
<dwc:Occurrence>
<dcterms:type>PhysicalObject</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-12T12:43:31</dcterms:modified>
<dwc:institutionCode>MVZ</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>Mammals</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14523</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>PreservedSpecimen</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:locationID>http://guid.mvz.org/sites/arg/127</dwc:locationID>
</dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:Identification>
<dwc:identificationID>http://guid.mvz.org/identifications/23459</dwc:identificationID>
<dwc:identifiedBy>Richard Sage</dwc:identifiedBy>
<dwc:dateIdentified>2000</dwc:dateIdentified>
<dwc:identificationQualifier>sp.</dwc:identificationQualifier>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14523</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:d79c11aa-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Identification>
<dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:d79c11aa-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
<dwc:scientificName>Ctenomys</dwc:scientificName>
<dwc:taxonRank>genus</dwc:taxonRank>
<dwc:nomenclaturalCode>ICZN</dwc:nomenclaturalCode>
<dwc:genus>Ctenomys</dwc:genus>
</dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:Identification>
<dwc:identificationID>http://guid.mvz.org/identifications/94752</dwc:identificationID>
<dwc:identifiedBy>James L Patton</dwc:identifiedBy>
<dwc:dateIdentified>2001-09-14</dwc:dateIdentified>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14523</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:df0a797c-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Identification>
<dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:df0a797c-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
<dwc:parentNameUsageID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:d79c11aa-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:parentNameUsageID>
<dwc:scientificName>Ctenomys sociabilis</dwc:scientificName>
<dwc:scientificNameAuthorship>Pearson and Christie, 1985</dwc:scientificNameAuthorship>
<dwc:taxonRank>species</dwc:taxonRank>
<dwc:nomenclaturalCode>ICZN</dwc:nomenclaturalCode>
<dwc:higherClassification>Animalia; Chordata; Vertebrata; Mammalia; Theria; Eutheria; Rodentia; Hystricognatha; Hystricognathi; Ctenomyidae; Ctenomyini; Ctenomys</dwc:higherClassification>
<dwc:kingdom>Animalia</dwc:kingdom>
<dwc:phylum>Chordata</dwc:phylum>
<dwc:class>Mammalia</dwc:class>
<dwc:order>Rodentia</dwc:order>
<dwc:family>Ctenomyidae</dwc:family>
<dwc:genus>Ctenomys</dwc:genus>
<dwc:specificEpithet>sociabilis</dwc:specificEpithet>
</dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:Occurrence>
<dcterms:type>PhysicalObject</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-12T12:43:31</dcterms:modified>
<dwc:institutionCode>MVZ</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>Mammals</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14524</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>PreservedSpecimen</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:locationID>http://guid.mvz.org/sites/arg/127</dwc:locationID>
</dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:Identification>
<dwc:identificationID>http://guid.mvz.org/identifications/94753</dwc:identificationID>
<dwc:identifiedBy>James L Patton</dwc:identifiedBy>
<dwc:dateIdentified>2001-09-14</dwc:dateIdentified>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14524</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:df0a797c-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Identification>
<dwc:ResourceRelationship>
<dwc:resourceRelationshipID>http://guid.mvz.org/relations/23423</dwc:resourceRelationshipID>
<dwc:resourceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14523</dwc:resourceID>
<dwc:relatedResourceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14524</dwc:relatedResourceID>
<dwc:relationshipOfResource>offspring of</dwc:relationshipOfResource>
</dwc:ResourceRelationship>
<dwc:ResourceRelationship>
<dwc:resourceRelationshipID>http://guid.mvz.org/relations/23424</dwc:resourceRelationshipID>
<dwc:resourceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14524</dwc:resourceID>
<dwc:relatedResourceID>urn:catalog:MVZ:Mammals:14523</dwc:relatedResourceID>
<dwc:relationshipOfResource>mother of</dwc:relationshipOfResource>
</dwc:ResourceRelationship>
</dwr:DarwinRecordSet>
Here is different example demonstrating area count observations for events on two different days at one location. Note that we omit the identification class here as there is not identification related data and link via the taxonID
directly:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dwr:DarwinRecordSet
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/dwcrecord/ http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/xsd/tdwg_dwc_classes.xsd"
xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"
xmlns:dwc="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/"
xmlns:dwr="http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/dwcrecord/">
<dcterms:Location>
<dwc:locationID>http://guid.mvz.org/sites/arg/127</dwc:locationID>
<dwc:country>Argentina</dwc:country>
<dwc:countryCode>AR</dwc:countryCode>
<dwc:stateProvince>Neuquén</dwc:stateProvince>
<dwc:locality>Valle Limay, Estancia Rincon Grande, 48 ha area with centroid at this point</dwc:locality>
<dwc:decimalLatitude>-40.97467</dwc:decimalLatitude>
<dwc:decimalLongitude>-71.0734</dwc:decimalLongitude>
<dwc:geodeticDatum>WGS84</dwc:geodeticDatum>
<dwc:coordinateUncertaintyInMeters>200</dwc:coordinateUncertaintyInMeters>
</dcterms:Location>
<dwc:Event>
<dwc:eventID>http://guid.mvz.org/events/2006/11/26/17</dwc:eventID>
<dwc:samplingProtocol>area count</dwc:samplingProtocol>
<dwc:eventDate>2006-11-26</dwc:eventDate>
<dwc:locationID>http://guid.mvz.org/sites/arg/127</dwc:locationID>
</dwc:Event>
<dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:AUDCLO:EBIRD:OBS64515288</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dcterms:type>Event</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-17T07:33:04Z</dcterms:modified>
<dwc:institutionCode>AUDCLO</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>EBIRD</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>HumanObservation</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:individualCount>2</dwc:individualCount>
<dwc:eventID>http://guid.mvz.org/events/2006/11/26/17</dwc:eventID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:f000ee00-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:f000ee00-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
<dwc:scientificName>Anthus hellmayri Hartert, 1909</dwc:scientificName>
<dwc:class>Aves</dwc:class>
<dwc:genus>Anthus</dwc:genus>
<dwc:specificEpithet>hellmayri</dwc:specificEpithet>
</dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:AUDCLO:EBIRD:OBS64515286</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dcterms:type>Event</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-17T07:33:04Z</dcterms:modified>
<dwc:institutionCode>AUDCLO</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>EBIRD</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>HumanObservation</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:individualCount>1</dwc:individualCount>
<dwc:eventID>http://guid.mvz.org/events/2006/11/26/17</dwc:eventID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:f000e838-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:f000e838-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
<dwc:scientificName>Anthus correndera Vieillot, 1818</dwc:scientificName>
<dwc:class>Aves</dwc:class>
<dwc:genus>Anthus</dwc:genus>
<dwc:specificEpithet>correndera</dwc:specificEpithet>
</dwc:Taxon>
<dwc:Event>
<dwc:eventID>http://guid.mvz.org/events/2006/11/27/6</dwc:eventID>
<dwc:samplingProtocol>area count</dwc:samplingProtocol>
<dwc:eventDate>2006-11-27</dwc:eventDate>
<dwc:locationID>http://guid.mvz.org/sites/arg/127</dwc:locationID>
</dwc:Event>
<dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:AUDCLO:EBIRD:OBS64515333</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dcterms:type>Event</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-17T07:33:04Z</dcterms:modified>
<dwc:institutionCode>AUDCLO</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>EBIRD</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>HumanObservation</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:individualCount>1</dwc:individualCount>
<dwc:eventID>http://guid.mvz.org/events/2006/11/27/6</dwc:eventID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:f000ee00-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:Occurrence>
<dwc:occurrenceID>urn:catalog:AUDCLO:EBIRD:OBS64515331</dwc:occurrenceID>
<dcterms:type>Event</dcterms:type>
<dcterms:modified>2009-02-17T07:33:04Z</dcterms:modified>
<dwc:institutionCode>AUDCLO</dwc:institutionCode>
<dwc:collectionCode>EBIRD</dwc:collectionCode>
<dwc:basisOfRecord>HumanObservation</dwc:basisOfRecord>
<dwc:individualCount>2</dwc:individualCount>
<dwc:eventID>http://guid.mvz.org/events/2006/11/27/6</dwc:eventID>
<dwc:taxonID>urn:lsid:catalogueoflife.org:taxon:f000ee00-29c1-102b-9a4a-00304854f820:col20120721</dwc:taxonID>
</dwc:Occurrence>
</dwr:DarwinRecordSet>