Search for Pseudoceros sp. (orange) returned 2,074 results.

  1. Site Page: Scatterplot List – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 22nd June 2012 The Scatterplot List allows for the plotting of a taxa or species assemblage occurrence records across all pairs of selected environmental layers. This includes any environmental-type layers from prior analysis. This tool provides a powerful way of identifying layers/variables that appear related in some way to species distributions...

  2. Site Page: So many fish, one great map – The Atlas launches FishMap – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 27th February 2013 By Andrea Wild From ugly ducklings like the Rough Dreamer to the kiss-me-I’m-really-a-prince Clown Triggerfish, Australia’s marine fishes are now at your fingertips thanks to FishMap, officially launched on Tuesday 26 February, 2013, by the Atlas of Living Australia ...

  3. Site Page: Student/Teacher resources: Ecolinc releases new field guide App – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 27th June 2013 By Ian McDonald – The other day I was asked over Twitter if the Atlas of Living Australia has developed any tools or resources which were suitable for school students...

  4. Site Page: TERN article: Soils to Satellites now live! – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 5th July 2013 Thanks to TERN for letting us repost this article – With the launch of the Soils to Satellites (S2S) online tool, TERN’s Eco-informatics facility gives people a way to explore and visualise relationships between types of ecosystem data that weren’t possible until now...

  5. Site Page: The time has come: a continent-wide system for monitoring for our biodiversity – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 20th September 2013 A collaboration of BoM, CSIRO and the Atlas of Living Australia have looked into how such a system might work and released their findings in a new report‑Biodiversity Profiling: Components of a continental biodiversity information capability...

  6. Site Page: Indigenous Ecological Knowledge: The Olkola People – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 17th April 2015 The Olkola People, CSIRO researchers from Cairns and Townsville, and the Tropical Indigenous Ethnobotany Centre (TIEC) are working together to look at ways they can use the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) to share and use knowledge that can help care for country and encourage Traditional Owners to contribute to and use the ALA...

  7. Site Page: Making Tracks to the Atlas: From OzTrack to ZoaTrack – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 21st September 2015 From big Crocodiles in Cape York to Little Penguins in and around St Kilda, the biodiversity projects that incorporate tracking devices are providing highly valuable data on the whereabouts of wildlife on-the-move. ZoaTrack researcher Hamish Campbell sends a turtle back to the wild with a tracking device attached to the shell...

  8. Site Page: One step closer to global citizen science discovery – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 29th March 2016 Discovering and connecting with citizen science projects at a global scale has never been closer to reality than now! Over the past few months the teams at SciStarter (www.scistarter.com – based in the USA) and the Atlas of Living Australia (www.ala.org...

  9. Site Page: Setting the benchmark for a streamlined approach to environmental data management – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 16th March 2017 The NSW Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) and the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) have teamed up to produce an integrated data feed to enable researchers more efficient access to environmental data across NSW. This collaboration sets the benchmark for a more streamlined approach to environmental data management across Australia...

  10. 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...