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  1. Site Page: Export Point Sample – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 30th January 2012 This tool samples environmental and contextual data layers at locations defined by species, genus, family etc. occurrences in a defined area. Think of this tool as driving a needle through through the occurrence locations and reading off all the values of a user-selected environmental and contextual layers. In other words, the occurrences define the geographic locations where the layers are sampled...

  2. Support article: Citizen science

    Getting involved as a citizen scientist Jump to section: Sharing data – iNaturalist About How does the ALA get data from iNaturalist Creating an iNaturalist account How to record an observation DigiVol The Atlas of Living Australia wouldn’t be what it is without citizen science and volunteer involvement. There are many ways to get involved with citizen science, and you don’t need any special equipment or expert knowledge – that’s the beauty of it...

  3. Site Page: Predict – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 31st January 2012 The Predict option under the Tools Menu helps you to identify where a species could occur – not just where it has been observed! The method used is called “MaxEnt” for Maximum Entropy and was developed by Stephen Phillips. See (Maxent software for species habitat modeling). To start a Prediction, select from the Menu Option, “Tools”, then “Predict”...

  4. Site Page: ALA in action: Trevor Booth, CSIRO Land and Water – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 26th February 2018 Trevor Booth uses the ALA to study where particular tree species can grow in Australia and overseas, under both current and future climatic conditions. In this article, Trevor describes some of his work and provides some useful tips for anyone using the ALA’s mapping and analysis features to study plant or animal distributions...

  5. Site Page: Celebrating ALA women in STEM – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 8th March 2023 The Churchill Fellowship Trust is a highly competitive awards program that provides opportunities for individuals to travel overseas to gain new knowledge and perspectives in their field of work. The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) is privileged to have two Churchill Fellowship Award recipients, Nat Raisbeck-Brown and Dr Erin Roger...

  6. Site Page: Celebrating International Day for Biological Diversity with the AU Biodiversity Heritage Library – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 22nd May 2023 How would you look up information on species and natural history? Would you do a Google search or visit your local library? How about checking out the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL)! It’s the world’s largest virtual library of biodiversity heritage literature and archival materials and contains materials published as far back as the 1400s! This incredible resource contains information on millions of the world’s species...

  7. Support article: Citing the ALA

    Jump to section: Citing the ALA website or data Using Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) Citing from programming languages Different ways to cite the ALA General Acknowledgment ALA as a partner or collaborator Occurrence record data galah ALA website in general Species pages AusTraits Species occurence distribution map Lists Spatial portal Species occurrence records Maps Layers Tools Using images found on the ALA FAQs There are many components of the Atlas of Living Australia that can be...

  8. 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...

  9. Support article: Scatterplot

    Please note: this guide has been written in relation to version 2.0 of the spatial portal due to brought into production in 2019. A different version of the portal will allow similar functions with some small differences in the user interface. If you are unable to access a required function, please contact support@ala.org.au. The scatterplot function links the sampled values of any two environmental variables on a species (or genus etc) with the map...

  10. Site Page: Faceting and Filtering – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 5th February 2012 Faceting A facet is an a single attribute of a species that has been indexed against all species records in the ALA’s species database; an indexed attribute. In the Spatial Portal facet classes are rendered in the legend and on the map with different colours...