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  1. Site Page: Spotlight on ALA users: Amateur photographer Steve Dew – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 18th April 2016 Have you ever wondered who else is using the Atlas of Living Australia? For our new blog series Spotlight on Users, we looked through our recent sightings and contacted contributors to find out how and why they use the ALA. Steven Dew is an amateur photographer based in Queensland...

  2. Site Page: Spatial Portal Update – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 6th March 2019 A major rewrite and update of the ALA's Spatial Portal mapping and analysis tool is complete and now live. The Spatial Portal – ALA’s mapping and analysis tool – continually evolves to meet user needs but its code base was making it inefficient to update and fit with other ALA products. So, over the last 18 months, we’ve been busy re-writing code to make the Spatial Portal more efficient...

  3. Site Page: Updates to ALA’s name and taxonomy index – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 6th November 2017 Two improvements to the ALA’s naming and taxonomy index within the BIE (Biodiversity Information Explorer) have just been released. The BIE is the taxonomic backbone of the ALA, underpinning information for over 120,000 species. 1. All sources of name and taxonomic information are now visible Data in the BIE is aggregated from many sources across Australia and New Zealand, such as the Australian Faunal Directory (AFD) or the New Zealand Organisms Register...

  4. Site Page: Survey-test – Atlas of Living Australia

    The ALA manages the Australian node of iNaturalist – the world’s leading social network for biodiversity. We recommend ALA users upload individual observations to iNaturalist Australia. The app is freely available for recording observations of flora, fauna and fungi...

  5. Site Page: Areas (Add to Map) – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 30th January 2012 Areas are one of four main data types in the Spatial Portal, along with species (taxa), layers and facets. Area can be defined by 14 different options. When an area gets defined, it is added to the map; a new layer is added to the layers list. Areas form the basis of most Spatial Portal operations either explicitly (by explicit definition) or implicitly (by defaulting to current map extents)...

  6. Site Page: Import or Upload Points – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 30th January 2012 You can import or upload your own point-based species data to the Spatial Portal. The uploaded data is treated the same as any species active layer and is only stored for the current session. Import Points To import points directly, on the menu select ‘Import’ and then ‘Points’. Import Points menu option Then enter a name (used as the layer name) and description for the data (which will be used in the layer metadata)...

  7. Site Page: ALA webinar: Saving species at speed – Conservation and the science of animal movement – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 22nd September 2021 Australian animals show an enormous diversity of movement behaviour, due to a long evolutionary history of adaptation to highly variable – and occasionally extreme – environmental conditions...

  8. Site Page: ALA webinar: Exploring citizen science in the context of disaster response and recovery – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 4th March 2021 The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) provides access to Australia’s largest collection of biodiversity information via the provision of open infrastructure and tools. Many of the tools available help support citizen science activities, including resources to support communities to respond to disaster events. For our first webinar series for 2021, join us for three talks from leading scientists enabling citizen science in the disaster response and recovery area...

  9. Site Page: ALA webinar: New Data From Historic Collections – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 17th March 2022 Across Australia there are 60 million natural history specimens held at museums, universities, botanic gardens, herbaria, seed banks and at CSIRO. These collections are made up of whole organisms, skins, tissue samples, skeletons and DNA samples – plus data … a lot of data … even including data about that data (metadata)...

  10. Site Page: ALA webinar: Advances in Biodiversity Modelling – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 1st December 2022 Advancements in scientific modelling have enabled improvements in key decision-making. When it comes to biodiversity this work is crucial, especially in our changing environment. Hear from our distinguished speakers about their work in this space, including the applications of modelling to conservation prioritisation, and sustainable land use. This webinar took place at 1.00pm AEDT, Wednesday 23 November 2022, with 201 live viewers in attendance...