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  1. Site Page: UNAA World Environment Day Awards 2011 Nominations – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 12th April 2011 Nominations are now open for the 2011 United Nations Association of Australia (UNAA) World Environment Day Awards. Individuals, organisations and businesses working for sustainability and the environment in their homes, schools and workplaces are encouraged to apply. Awards The Awards are held each year in celebration of United Nations World Environment Day (June 5) and this year also in recognition of the 2011 International Year of Forests...

  2. Site Page: The Atlas now has over 25 million records – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 30th August 2011 The recent addition of 1.2 million records from the Canberra Ornithologists Group (COG) Garden Bird Surveys data set brings the grand total of Atlas records to just over 25 million! We have occurrence records – specimens, sightings, surveys – together with images, links to videos and species profile fact sheets. The Canberra Ornithologists Group (COG) has been diligently compiling garden bird surveys for 30 years...

  3. Site Page: One billion downloads and beyond – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 31st January 2014 The Atlas of Living Australia reached a major milestone over the Australia Day Long Weekend, clocking up one billion downloads. The Atlas provides free, online access to over 41 million records of Australia”s biodiversity, with each record having been downloaded an average of 25 times. “Reaching a billion downloads shows us the value of data sharing: capture it once, make it freely available and share it many times,” says John La Salle, Director of the Atlas...

  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: iNaturalist Australia launched – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 2nd October 2019 This week we launched iNaturalist Australia, the Australian node of iNaturalist, the world’s leading global social biodiversity network. We now encourage you to use iNaturalist Australia to record your individual plant, animal and fungi sightings. You can still upload sightings using our Record a Sighting function, but we will be phasing it out...

  6. Site Page: Echidna CSI: Using citizen science to track echidnas throughout Australia – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 1st November 2021 Echidna CSI is a research project run by the University of Adelaide using data collected by citizen scientists to study echidnas. The project has had a huge impact on echidna research and conservation...

  7. Site Page: Hunting the snark – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 19th March 2013 By Lee Belbin (Atlas of Living Australia) and Norm McKenzie (Department of Environment and Conservation, Western Australia) Mormopterus loriae at Dampier Peninsula 1977 Mangroves are a much maligned group of trees. Yes, most of the time they do not make for a comfortable human environment. In mangroves, you could be up to your neck in mud being bitten by clouds of sand flies and eyeing a 5m croc (who is eying you) in 48 degrees Celsius and 100% humidity...

  8. 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...

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