Search for SENECIO+SP.+(MT+HUNTLEY+P.I.FORSTER +PIF11832) returned 11 results.

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  1. Site Page: Over 10 million collections-based records on the Atlas. – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 8th May 2015 It was early in 2014 that the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) announced that it had reached one billion downloads and now in 2015, the ALA is proud to announce another great achievement...

  2. Site Page: Greater Impact through Environmental Infrastructure Symposium – registration open – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 19th April 2017 To celebrate the tenth anniversary of NCRIS, the ALA is partnering with a number of NCRIS facilities to host a symposium to celebrate the collaborative impact of Australia’s environmental infrastructure. The symposium will showcase the impact of 10 years of NCRIS investment into environmental infrastructure, as well as providing a platform to foster new collaborations and shape future innovations...

  3. Site Page: Council of Heads of Australian Faunal Collections (CHAFC) – Atlas of Living Australia

    The Council of Heads of Australian Faunal Collections (CHAFC) is the peak body representing Australia’s major zoological and palaeontological collections, primarily within the jurisdiction of regional, state and territory and commonwealth governments (chafc.org.au)...

  4. Site Page: National Reconciliation Week – making the ALA more relevant to Indigenous people – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 8th June 2016 There are many ways to get involved in National Reconciliation Week activities (27 May – 3 June). At the ALA, we saw it as a great opportunity to kick-start the next stage of our Indigenous Ecological Knowledge (IEK) work, focusing on making the ALA more relevant to Indigenous people and communities. Traditional land management practices and Indigenous knowledge about plants, animals and the environment are connected with people, place and culture...

  5. Site Page: ALA National Science Week 2023 recordings – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 25th August 2023 To celebrate National Science Week 2023, the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) hosted three free virtual events. Our events aimed to ignite curiosity, foster learning, and deepen connection with biological sciences and the environment. Whether you were able to join us on the day and want to catch-up on the content, or if you weren’t able to make it, we’ve got you covered with recordings of our three events...

  6. Site Page: The Atlas welcomes two new university herbarium data providers – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 24th March 2015 The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) welcomes two new university herbaria collections: the Janet Cosh Herbarium (WOLL, based at the University of Wollongong), and the La Trobe University Herbarium (LTB). University herbaria are important teaching collections, with specialised holdings that often reflect the diversity of the region in which the university is situated, as well as the professional expertise of the teaching staff...

  7. 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...

  8. Site Page: Biogeographic patterns and climate change – a teaching resource for university lecturers – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 18th July 2014 A Case Study Simon Connor School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment, Monash University This case study describes a practical exercise developed for students in the School of Geography and Environmental Science at Monash University. The exercise is based around simple bioclimatic modelling techniques and designed for first-year university students of biogeography, ecology and climatology...

  9. Site Page: Meet Caitlin – An ALA Indigenous Internship student with a flare for coding – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 10th February 2023 Across summer 2022-23, the ALA hosted two Indigenous Internship students as part of the National Collections and Marine Infrastructure (NCMI) Indigenous Scholarship Program. Celebrating International Women and Girls in Science Day, we’re profiling Caitlin Ramsay! Caitlin joined the ALA Science and Decision Support team during her internship, where she investigated the distribution of invasive species across Australia over time...

  10. Site Page: Hunting the snark – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 19th March 2013 By Lee Belbin (Atlas of Living Australia) and Norm McKenzie (Department of Environment and Conservation, Western Australia) Mormopterus loriae at Dampier Peninsula 1977 Mangroves are a much maligned group of trees. Yes, most of the time they do not make for a comfortable human environment. In mangroves, you could be up to your neck in mud being bitten by clouds of sand flies and eyeing a 5m croc (who is eying you) in 48 degrees Celsius and 100% humidity...