% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/data.R \docType{data} \name{microorganisms} \alias{microorganisms} \title{Data Set with 63,472 Microorganisms} \format{ A \link[tibble:tibble]{tibble} with 63,472 observations and 22 variables: \itemize{ \item \code{mo}\cr ID of microorganism as used by this package \item \code{fullname}\cr Full name, like \code{"Escherichia coli"}. For the taxonomic ranks genus, species and subspecies, this is the 'pasted' text of genus, species, and subspecies. For all taxonomic ranks higher than genus, this is the name of the taxon. \item \code{status} \cr Status of the taxon, either "accepted", "synomym" or "synonym" \item \code{kingdom}, \code{phylum}, \code{class}, \code{order}, \code{family}, \code{genus}, \code{species}, \code{subspecies}\cr Taxonomic rank of the microorganism \item \code{rank}\cr Text of the taxonomic rank of the microorganism, such as \code{"species"} or \code{"genus"} \item \code{ref}\cr Author(s) and year of related scientific publication. This contains only the \emph{first surname} and year of the \emph{latest} authors, e.g. "Wallis \emph{et al.} 2006 \emph{emend.} Smith and Jones 2018" becomes "Smith \emph{et al.}, 2018". This field is directly retrieved from the source specified in the column \code{source}. Moreover, accents were removed to comply with CRAN that only allows ASCII characters, e.g. "Váňová" becomes "Vanova". \item \code{lpsn}\cr Identifier ('Record number') of the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN). This will be the first/highest LPSN identifier to keep one identifier per row. For example, \emph{Acetobacter ascendens} has LPSN Record number 7864 and 11011. Only the first is available in the \code{microorganisms} data set. \item \code{lpsn_parent}\cr LPSN identifier of the parent taxon \item \code{lpsn_renamed_to}\cr LPSN identifier of the currently valid taxon \item \code{gbif}\cr Identifier ('taxonID') of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) \item \code{gbif_parent}\cr GBIF identifier of the parent taxon \item \code{gbif_renamed_to}\cr GBIF identifier of the currently valid taxon \item \code{source}\cr Either "GBIF", "LPSN" or "manually added" (see \emph{Source}) \item \code{prevalence}\cr Prevalence of the microorganism, see \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}} \item \code{snomed}\cr Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine (SNOMED) code of the microorganism, version of 1 July, 2021 (see \emph{Source}). Use \code{\link[=mo_snomed]{mo_snomed()}} to retrieve it quickly, see \code{\link[=mo_property]{mo_property()}}. } } \source{ \itemize{ \item Parte, A.C. \emph{et al.} (2020). \strong{List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) moves to the DSMZ.} International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 70, 5607-5612; \doi{10.1099/ijsem.0.004332}. Accessed from \url{https://lpsn.dsmz.de} on 12 September, 2022. \item GBIF Secretariat (November 26, 2021). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset \doi{10.15468/39omei}. Accessed from \url{https://www.gbif.org} on 12 September, 2022. \item Public Health Information Network Vocabulary Access and Distribution System (PHIN VADS). US Edition of SNOMED CT from 1 September 2020. Value Set Name 'Microoganism', OID 2.16.840.1.114222.4.11.1009 (v12). URL: \url{https://phinvads.cdc.gov} } } \usage{ microorganisms } \description{ A data set containing the full microbial taxonomy (\strong{last updated: 12 September, 2022}) of six kingdoms from the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). This data set is the backbone of this \code{AMR} package. MO codes can be looked up using \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}}. } \details{ Please note that entries are only based on the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) (see below). Since these sources incorporate entries based on (recent) publications in the International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology (IJSEM), it can happen that the year of publication is sometimes later than one might expect. For example, \emph{Staphylococcus pettenkoferi} was described for the first time in Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease in 2002 (\doi{10.1016/s0732-8893(02)00399-1}), but it was not before 2007 that a publication in IJSEM followed (\doi{10.1099/ijs.0.64381-0}). Consequently, the \code{AMR} package returns 2007 for \code{mo_year("S. pettenkoferi")}. } \section{Included Taxa}{ Included taxonomic data are: \itemize{ \item All ~42,000 (sub)species from the kingdoms of Archaea, Bacteria and Protozoa \item All ~16,000 (sub)species from ~30 relevant orders of the kingdom of Fungi. The kingdom of Fungi is a very large taxon with almost 300,000 different (sub)species, of which most are not microbial (but rather macroscopic, like mushrooms). Because of this, not all fungi fit the scope of this package and including everything would tremendously slow down our algorithms too. By only including relevant taxonomic orders, the most relevant fungi are covered (such as all species of \emph{Aspergillus}, \emph{Candida}, \emph{Cryptococcus}, \emph{Histplasma}, \emph{Pneumocystis}, \emph{Saccharomyces} and \emph{Trichophyton}). \item All ~4,200 (sub)species from ~50 other relevant genera from the kingdom of Animalia (such as \emph{Strongyloides} and \emph{Taenia}) \item All ~60 (sub)species from ~50 other relevant genera from the kingdom of Animalia (such as \emph{Strongyloides} and \emph{Taenia}) \item All ~14,000 previously accepted names of all included (sub)species (these were taxonomically renamed) \item The complete taxonomic tree of all included (sub)species: from kingdom to subspecies \item The identifier of the parent taxons \item The responsible author(s) and year of scientific publication } \subsection{Manual additions}{ For convenience, some entries were added manually: \itemize{ \item 11 entries of \emph{Streptococcus} (beta-haemolytic: groups A, B, C, D, F, G, H, K and unspecified; other: viridans, milleri) \item 2 entries of \emph{Staphylococcus} (coagulase-negative (CoNS) and coagulase-positive (CoPS)) \item 1 entry of \emph{Blastocystis} (\emph{B. hominis}), although it officially does not exist (Noel \emph{et al.} 2005, PMID 15634993) \item 1 entry of \emph{Moraxella} (\emph{M. catarrhalis}), which was formally named \emph{Branhamella catarrhalis} (Catlin, 1970) though this change was never accepted within the field of clinical microbiology \item 5 other 'undefined' entries (unknown, unknown Gram negatives, unknown Gram positives, unknown yeast and unknown fungus) } The syntax used to transform the original data to a cleansed \R format, can be found here: \url{https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/main/data-raw/reproduction_of_microorganisms.R}. } \subsection{Direct download}{ Like all data sets in this package, this data set is publicly available for download in the following formats: R, MS Excel, Apache Feather, Apache Parquet, SPSS, SAS, and Stata. Please visit \href{https://msberends.github.io/AMR/articles/datasets.html}{our website for the download links}. The actual files are of course available on \href{https://github.com/msberends/AMR/tree/main/data-raw}{our GitHub repository}. } } \section{About the Records from LPSN (see \emph{Source})}{ LPSN is the main source for bacteriological taxonomy of this \code{AMR} package. The List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) provides comprehensive information on the nomenclature of prokaryotes. LPSN is a free to use service founded by Jean P. Euzeby in 1997 and later on maintained by Aidan C. Parte. } \examples{ microorganisms } \seealso{ \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}}, \code{\link[=mo_property]{mo_property()}}, \link{microorganisms.codes}, \link{intrinsic_resistant} } \keyword{datasets}