The Ontology for Parasite Lifecycle (OPL) models the life cycle stage details of various parasites, including Trypanosoma sp., Leishmania major, and Plasmodium sp., etc.
opl
OPL
Local identifiers in Ontology for Parasite LifeCycle should match this
regular expression:
^\d{7}$
Compact URIs (CURIEs) constructed from Ontology for Parasite LifeCycle should match
this regular expression:
^OPL:\d{7}$
namespaceEmbeddedInLUI
as true.
This means that you may see local unique identifiers that include a redundant prefix and delimiter (also known
as a banana)
and therefore look like a CURIE. For Ontology for Parasite LifeCycle, the banana looks like
OPL:
.
Therefore, you may see local unique identifiers for this resource that look like
OPL:0000319
(instead of the canonical form 0000319
) and CURIEs for this resource that look like
OPL:OPL:0000319
(instead of the canonical form OPL:0000319
).
The Bioregistry will automatically strip off the banana when standardizing local unique identifiers and CURIEs.
The metaregistry provides mappings between the Bioregistry and other registries. There are 8 mappings to external registries for this resource with 2 unique external prefixes.
Registry Name | Registry Metaprefix | External Prefix | Curate |
---|---|---|---|
AberOWL | aberowl |
OPL
|
|
BioContext | biocontext |
OPL
|
|
BioPortal | bioportal |
OPL
|
|
FAIRSharing | fairsharing |
FAIRsharing.ez2nhb
|
|
Identifiers.org | miriam |
opl
|
|
OBO Foundry | obofoundry |
opl
|
|
OLS | ols |
opl
|
|
OntoBee | ontobee |
OPL
|
When using this resource in RDF, the following URI format should be used:
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/OPL_$1
A provider turns a local unique identifiers from a resource into a URI. Many providers are also resolvable as URLs (i.e., they can be used in a web browser).
The local unique identifier 0000319
is used to demonstrate the providers
available for Ontology for Parasite LifeCycle. A guide for curating additional providers can be found
here.