Plant Ontology Webinar- May 2011 release
This page is under construction....
Goals:
To demonstrate the new plant anatomy terms that have been added to accommodate mosses and give reviewers a brief tutorial on how to use PO.
People to invite- potential Reviewers:
Stefan Rensing and Daniel Lang of the Physcomitrella group, University of Freiburg, Germany;
Brent Mishler, UC Berkeley, USA, (bmishler@berkeley.edu) Brent Mishler
Bill Buck (NYBG) William Buck (bbuck@nybg.org)
Michael L. Christianson- now at Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California (mxianson@pacbell.net)
B. Crandall-Stotler (Southern Illinois University)
B. Goffinet (University of Connecticut)
Scott Schuette (Southern Illinois University) link
(will present talk on Physco bioinformatics at our symposium at the IBC)
Topics
1. Philosophy behind the organization of the ontology
How terms are grouped
2. What are the most important changes that had to be made to accommodate mosses and other non-angiosperm plants?
Top level reorganization
Adding new categories to encompass all structures:
- collective plant structure
- cardinal organ part
- collective organ part structure
- embryonic plant structure
- rhizoid
- trichome
- plant anatomical space
Theses changes were important for all plants
Redefining upper-level terms of the plant structure branch
New definitions of plant cell, plant organ, portion of plant tissue, plus the new terms listed above, make these definitions appropriate for all plants
-Adding new mid-level terms
-Inserting new low-level terms