Search for Chromodoris africana returned 5 results.

Refine results

Current filters

  • Section: Site Page
  1. Site Page: Citizen Science and Biosecurity: bee alert and bee alarmed – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 8th April 2015 Australian Citizen Scientists are busy (like bees!) documenting the spread of an exotic and invasive South African carder bee, Afranthidium Immanthidium repetitum. Through the great work of the BowerBird community, the Atlas of Living Australia has learnt that the known distribution for this species has increased significantly. From what was first recorded in Brisbane in 2000, Sydney in 2007, and recent records in Rockhampton and Albury lodged in late 2014...

  2. Site Page: Volunteers tackling digitisation of collections – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 18th April 2018 Digitisation of collections continues as DigiVol reaches 3,000 registered volunteers. Specimen in the Milwaukee Public Museum collection. Image credit: Milwaukee Public Museum DigiVol is a collaboration between the Atlas of Living Australia and the Australian Museum, and was launched in 2011 initially as an experiment in crowd-sourcing. The Australian Museum wanted to see whether there were online volunteers willing to help natural history collections capture data...

  3. Site Page: DigiVol: One Million Tasks! – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 3rd October 2018 The DigiVol website began with one Australian Museum project, we've now completed one million tasks. by Rhiannon Stephens The DigiVol website began with one Australian Museum project. The aim of this first project was to ask volunteers to transcribe all the specimen label data for 5,000 pinned Cicada specimens from the museum collection. This information was then transferred to the museum’s database before being shared across many online biodiversity databases...

  4. Site Page: Meet iNaturalist Australia’s super users – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 21st October 2019 iNaturalist Australia, the Australian node of the global biodiversity platform, launched this month and is now integrated with the Atlas of Living Australia. iNaturalist Australia greatly improves the ALA’s ability to enable users to upload sightings and identify species. It provides an Australian gateway to iNaturalist for people to share findings with biodiversity-loving people across the globe...

  5. Site Page: ALA-cited publications – Atlas of Living Australia

    Have you used the ALA in your published (or soon-to-be published) research? Please let us know about it via this form. We’re interested in all types of research that the ALA supports including research publications in scientific journals, reports, book chapters, theses, as well as websites and apps. Online bibliography This bibliography provides a list of known publications that have utilised data in the ALA or ALA infrastructure to support their research...

  • »