Search for Upeneus australiae returned 47 results.

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  • Section: Support article
  1. Support article: How to show the distribution of a species on a map of Australia

    User Guide 2 Begin at the Atlas of Living Australia homepage. Click on Search & analyse, then choose Spatial analysis (Spatial Portal). Select Add to Map, then Species. Type the species or common name, then click Next. Check all the other aspects you need by using the ticks to the left. Then click Next. The dots on the map show occurrence records for that species. You can change the colour, size and opacity of the dots. You can also change it to points from a density grid...

  2. Support article: How to show the distribution of more than one species on a map of Australia

    User Guide 8 On the ALA’s Spatial Portal, you can add as many species to one map as you like. To see how to do this, have a look at ALA User Guide 2 –Species distributions on a map. This guide shows you how to map more than one species in the same Genus or Family. You can find the Genus or Family of a species by looking in the Classification tab of the species overview page. See ALA User Guide 6 ‐ Species information...

  3. Support article: How do I identify a species?

    If you are not sure what the species is that you have observed, there are a number of ways you can get help finding out. Jump to section: Identification help for all living things Identification help for animals Identification help for plants Identification help for fungi More information Identification help for all living things ALA now manages the Australian node of iNaturalist – the world’s leading social network for biodiversity...

  4. Support article: What licence should I use?

    The ALA encourages the use of the latest version of the Creative Commons Australia or international jurisdiction licenses and our contribution forms are geared to this type of license. The Creative Commons Australia Licenses that are available when sharing via the ALA are: Creative Commons Zero - CC0 Attribution – CC BY Attribution-Noncommercial – CC BY-NC The ALA offers an integrated set of biological observations to Australian and international researchers and the community...

  5. Support article: What is MERIT?

    Monitoring Evaluation Reporting and Improvement Tool (MERIT) is the Australian Government Department of the Environment and Energy’s online reporting tool and is designed to collect and store planning, monitoring and reporting data associated with natural resource management grants projects funded by the Australian Government. The system aggregates project data to tell a whole-of-programme story about the impact of natural resource management investments...

  6. Support article: Introduction to the ALA

    Jump to section: Introduction to the ALA Team Collaboration and Partnerships Funding Introduction to the ALA The Atlas of Living Australia is a collaborative, digital and open infrastructure repository that aggregates biodiversity data from multiple sources to make it accessible for research, analysis, and education...

  7. Support article: What is DigiVol?

    Digivol is an online tool that enables volunteers to capture data and digitise collections held within museums, libraries, archives and herbaria. DigiVol is a collaboration between the Atlas of Living Australia and the Australian Museum, Through DigiVol, volunteers help collection owners make their research material available to everyone online...

  8. Support article: Tabulation Case Study

    Author: Lee Belbin Tabulation in the Spatial Portal of the Atlas of Living Australia is a powerful way of comparing how species and areas are partitioned. Think of tabulations as the categorical (class) equivalent to scatterplots. Scatterplots display species occurrences against two environmental variables represented as X and Y-axes, for example ‘Mean annual temperature’ or ‘Annual rainfall’. Tabulations replace these X and Y axes of continuous numeric values with categories or classes...

  9. Support article: Classification case study

    Landscape classification using the Atlas of Living Australia Author: Professor Brendan Mackey, The Fenner School of Environment and Society. The Australian National University Prof Brendan Mackey, The Australian National University Introduction Our capacity to analyse space and time patterns in biological, ecological and environmental phenomena was transformed in the 1980’s by Geographic Information Systems (GIS), remote sensing and computer-based environmental modelling...

  10. 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...