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  1. Biodiversity Science project: The Shark Trust: Great Eggcase Hunt

    The Great Eggcase Hunt is a Shark Trust citizen science recording project encouraging people to get out on the beach and look for mermaid's purses (the eggcases of sharks, skates and rays) and then record what they find! An eggcase (or mermaid’s purse) is a tough leathery case that protects the embryo while developing. Each eggcase contains one embryo which will develop over several months into a miniature version of the adult...

  2. Site Page: December 2008 newsletter summary – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 24th December 2008 December 2008 – Atlas activities, articles and reports, media releases, conferences and workshops, biodiversity weblinks Seasons Greetings from the ALA team The Atlas team would like to thank all those who have expressed interest in the project during 2008. It has been a year of laying foundations and we look forward to delivering some results in 2009. Season’s Greetings...

  3. Biodiversity Science project: Global Fishing Watch

    Global Fishing Watch is the product of a partnership between Oceana, SkyTruth and Google that provides a never-before-seen view of commercial fishing in the ocean. Hundreds of millions of people depend on the ocean for their livelihoods and approximately 3 billion rely on it for a primary food source. However, the world’s oceans are threatened by global overfishing, illegal fishing and habitat destruction. These threats could undermine the many benefits the oceans provide us with...

  4. Biodiversity Science project: Project eTrout

    Virtual reality (VR) provides exciting opportunities for environmental education and research. We invite your participation in a new program to engage students, anglers, and citizen scientists in fish ecology and climate change research using new VR methods. Participants will learn about fish ecology first-hand by exploring streams in VR and will be members of a research team lead by US Geological Survey (USGS) scientists...

  5. Biodiversity Science project: Picture Post

    Picture Post invites everyone with a digital camera to become an environmental monitor. All you have to do is place a 4-inch-by-4-inch wood or plastic post in the ground, with the top at chest-height. Then, resting your camera on the top of the post, take a series of nine photographs: eight to cover a panoramic view of the surrounding landscape and a ninth of the sky directly over the post. Upload your photos to the Picture Post website, and you’ve just helped track our changing environment...

  6. Biodiversity Science project: Koala Program

    Koala presence is mapped using Koala sightings by our members and the general public, and also data from field surveys for koala scats (droppings) under trees. Between January 2015 and the end of 2019 we have gathered over 2500 records of koala presence...

  7. Biodiversity Science project: NoiseTube

    Currently over 50% of the world’s population lives in urban areas. Being continuously surrounded by traffic jams, construction sites and urban events, city dwellers are typically exposed to a considerable amount of noise. NoiseTube facilitate sound measuring at any place and any time through a mobile app which exploits basic smartphone functionalities, namely microphone, wireless connectivity and localisation through GPS...

  8. Support article: Infrastructure overview

    The ALA is built using a multi-tiered architecture using open source libraries and open standards at its core. The diagram below depicts a high level view of the applications and components that made the core ALA. Front-end apps Most front end applications in the ALA are web applications that can be accessed via an Internet browser such as Google, Chrome or Firefox. The set of applications is also complemented by native Android and iOS mobile applications for some of our systems...

  9. Support article: Flickr images

    Note: This guide refers to version 2.0 of the spatial portal. Map images were supplied by Panoramio in previous versions of the spatial portal. Flickr is a free service that allows you to upload, view and map spatially registered images (images that have be geolocated: given a latitude and longitude). The Spatial Portal of the ALA uses the Flickr web services to tap and display any available images with a location within the displayed map window...

  10. Site Page: An easier way to login to the ALA – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 10th August 2015 From the family pet’s name to your Mother’s maiden name, a favourite species of Australian wildlife or just plain old haphazard ‘password’… Creating and remembering multiple passwords has become a frustrating requirement in our online lives...