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  1. Site Page: Exploring species distribution using environmental scatter plots – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 15th March 2011 A new Atlas scatter plot tool provides a new way to explore the environmental factors which control the range of each species - and raises interesting questions along the way. The Atlas of Living Australia spatial portal now includes additional tools for exploring the environmental parameters which influence the distribution of each species. These tools often suggest interesting questions about the biology of the species...

  2. Site Page: Aussie icons team up to tackle climate change – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 22nd June 2020 Two of Australia’s most iconic ecosystems, eucalypt trees and reef corals, could end up being the ‘best of pals’ when it comes to fighting climate change. This story was written by Amy Edwards and first appeared in ECOS, CSIRO’s environmental and sustainability science news. Burnt Eucalypts regenerating on Putty Road, NSW near the Hunter Valley following the 2019-2020 Australian bushfire season. Image by Ian Sanderson/Flickr...

  3. Site Page: Counting Koalas Across the Country: Citizen Science – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 3rd November 2015 The Koala is one of the most recognizable and celebrated species in Australian fauna, inhabiting Eucalyptus woodlands and forests through out eastern Australia: from the SE South Australia across Victoria, Eastern NSW, and SE QLD. Koalas are one of the few Australian species that feed exclusively on Eucalyptus leaves and are partial to only a few gum tree species (not a […] Photo: Scott Mills via iNaturalist License: CC-BY-SA 3...

  4. 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...

  5. Site Page: Species names – Atlas of Living Australia

    Learn more about: What is a ‘species name’? How is a species name determined? Can a species name have more than one meaning? Why does a species have more than one name? Where does the ALA get its species names? What is the problem with common names? Why doesn’t the ALA list all the common names for a species? How does the ALA resolve species names, noting that they change over time? How does the ALA treat manuscript or phrase names? What is a ‘species name’? A species (or ‘scientific’) name...

  6. 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...

  7. Site Page: ALA welcomes new data provider: the University of Melbourne Herbarium (MELU) – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 18th December 2014 The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) recently welcomed a new data provider: the University of Melbourne Herbarium (MELU). Home to approximately 100,000 specimens, MELU is the largest university herbarium in Australia...

  8. Site Page: Spotlight on ALA Users – Catherine Clowes – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 26th September 2017 Catherine Clowes, from the University of Melbourne is using the ALA while researching for her PhD. Catherine’s project is focused on the native shrub Spyridium parvifolium. The plant, also known as Dusty Miller, is endemic to South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Tasmania. She aims to investigate the phylogeny, morphology, genetic diversity, phylogeography and ecology of the species...

  9. Site Page: ALA in use: Dave Maynard, Environmental Consultant – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 2nd July 2018 We talk with an ecologist and environmental consultant, about how he uses the ALA to inform environmental impact assessments and offset planning for development projects. Dave Maynard, Principal Ecologist, NGH Environmental, in his ‘office’ on the Central Tablelands of New South Wales with the threatened Eucalyptus pulverulenta (Silver-leafed Mountain Gum)...

  10. Site Page: Information for GovHack – Atlas of Living Australia

    The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) is Australia’s national biodiversity database. It provides free, online access to information about Australia’s amazing biodiversity. TL;DR – just take me to the API docs… https://api.ala.org.au/ Postman Link | Video | Presentation Slides The data contained within the ALA has been fully parsed, processed and augmented with consistent taxonomic, geolocation and climate/environmental data...