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  1. Site Page: Calling all citizen scientists – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 5th November 2014 With summer almost here, now is the perfect time to get out of the house and enjoy Australia’s great outdoors...

  2. Site Page: Play the mimicry game with Australia’s velvet ants – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 8th April 2020 CSIRO and the University of Leeds are calling on people to play a short online game that will help investigate mimicry among velvet ant species. A curious kind of wasp Velvet ants (Mutillidae) are wasps that parasitise bees, carefully invading their nests and targeting their larvae by laying their eggs on or in this unsuspecting fresh food source...

  3. Site Page: Tree of Trees launch – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 6th September 2010 The Atlas of Living Australia is one of the proud sponsors of the Acacia Tree of Trees exhibit held at the “old nursery” site in the Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra. By Robyn Lawrence, Atlas of Living Australia The Atlas of Living Australia is one of the proud sponsors of the Acacia Tree of Trees exhibit held at the “old nursery” site in the Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra...

  4. Site Page: Have you seen this seaweed in Victoria? – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 8th April 2011 The Victorian Department of Sustainability and Environment is calling for any sightings of Undaria pinnatifida, also known as Japanese Kelp or Wakame. Undaria is a golden brown seaweed that grows between 0.5 and 3 metres in length. Key features of Undaria are frilly growth at the base and a stripe up the middle of the frond. It is native to Japan, Korea and some parts of China and Russia, and used as the food product wakame...

  5. Site Page: Wildlife Spotter – ABC’s citizen science project – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 1st August 2016 This year’s ABC citizen science project for National Science Week is called Wildlife Spotter and it kicks off today, Monday 1 August. Wildlife Spotter is calling all keen citizen scientists to help identify animals captured by hidden cameras. To join in go to www.wildlifespotter.net.au. Researchers have set up automatic cameras in tropical rainforests, dry rangelands, and cities across Australia to snap wildlife day and night...

  6. Site Page: This is one bird to be cass-o-wary of! – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 26th September 2023 Celebrating #WorldCassowaryDay Err… is that a bird or a dinosaur? Well, both (kind of)! We’re talking about the Southern Cassowary (Casuarius casuarius), often described as one of the closest living relatives of dinosaurs. Southern Cassowary (Casuarius casuarius) adult. Photo Credit Tom Hunt CC BY NC These gigantic flightless birds (‘ratites’) occupy tropical areas of northern Australia and Papua New Guinea...

  7. Site Page: Citizen Science and Bushfire Recovery – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 26th February 2020 The 2019-20 bushfire season has been a historically significant and unprecedented season, wreaking destruction on a massive scale and impacting biodiversity, air, water and built environments, as well as having economic, social and psychological effects on Australia’s population...

  8. Site Page: Diving into Indigenous biocultural knowledge of freshwater turtles in South East Arnhem Land – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 22nd December 2021 Aboriginal Elders of south east Arnhem Land, are concerned about the impacts of pigs and buffalo on culturally important freshwater turtles (locally called 'freshwoda teduls' in Roper River Kriol). The local Ngukurr Yangbala (young people) Rangers worked with Elders to add data to the ALA and record knowledge about these species...

  9. Site Page: Environmental DNA (eDNA) in the ALA – Atlas of Living Australia

    Environmental DNA is: “… DNA that is collected from a variety of environmental samples such as soil, seawater, snow or even air [1] rather than directly sampled from an individual organism. As various organisms interact with the environment, DNA is expelled and accumulates in their surroundings. Example sources of eDNA include, but are not limited to, faeces, mucus, gametes, shed skin, carcasses and hair...

  10. Site Page: What’s living in your street? The Atlas of Living Australia will tell you. – Atlas of Living Australia

    Posted on 28th July 2011 Atlas of Living Australia Media Release What’s living in your street? The Atlas of Living Australia will tell you. Within 5 km of News Limited in Holt Street, Sydney for example there are reports of at least 3,500 different animal species, and 2,400 plant species. ABC Southbank in Melbourne is a neighbour to more than […] Atlas of Living Australia Media Release What’s living in your street? The Atlas of Living Australia will tell you...