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  • Sectie: Ondersteuningsartikel
  1. Ondersteuningsartikel: Downloading data

    To download your project data, go to the project data page and select the ‘Download’ button at the top of the data view. Structure of the downloaded data The downloaded data comes in an Excel spreadsheet, with the following sheets: Project: Project metadata Sites: A list of all sites used in the project DwC Records: A list of all Darwin Core records in the project. See more information on Darwin Core here. Additional sheets for each survey in the project...

  2. Ondersteuningsartikel: Uploading large datasets

    BioCollect will accept data from any point in time. If you have a limited number of historical records then once you’ve set up your project you’ll be able to manually enter the data. Currently users are only able to upload one record at a time- there is no facility for users to bulk upload their own data. If you have a large number of records that would take too long to upload manually then we may be able to bulk upload the records to BioCollect for you...

  3. Ondersteuningsartikel: Configuring species in a survey

    If your survey form contains a species field, you can configure which species you’d like survey users to be able to select from. For example, you might want to constrain the list to species found in your local area. To configure the species fields: Click on the “Admin” button at the top. Click on “Survey settings” on the left. Click the “Species” tab. All the species fields in your survey form are displayed...

  4. Ondersteuningsartikel: Survey location settings

    The location settings allow you to configure how users record locations in your survey form, and the styling of the map displayed in the survey. To configure the location settings for your survey: Click on the “Admin” button at the top. Click on “Survey settings” on the left. Click the “Locations” tab. Configuring how users record locations In the first section you can configure how users provide location information when they are entering data...

  5. Ondersteuningsartikel: Project Outcomes

    The Outcomes section allow you to track how you are tracking against the planned outcomes for your project. To add and edit project outcomes, click on the 'Outcomes' tab.

  6. Ondersteuningsartikel: How to access ALA APIs

    Jump to section: Examples of ALA APIs Explore our species information Find an image's link and attribution information We provide access to our data via a set of REST APIs documented on Swagger. You can find the list of published APIs and relevant Swagger documentation at docs.ala.org.au. You can use these APIs in your work to access our open-source data more easily and feed into downstream analyses using your own system...

  7. Ondersteuningsartikel: Citizen science

    Getting involved as a citizen scientist Jump to section: Sharing data – iNaturalist About How does the ALA get data from iNaturalist Creating an iNaturalist account How to record an observation DigiVol The Atlas of Living Australia wouldn’t be what it is without citizen science and volunteer involvement. There are many ways to get involved with citizen science, and you don’t need any special equipment or expert knowledge – that’s the beauty of it...

  8. Ondersteuningsartikel: What are biodiversity data standards?

    Different researchers and institutions capture and store data in the forms and combinations which best meet their needs. However, in order to make this data more widely accessible and to ensure it can be reused for different purposes, data providers need to consider the most appropriate way to expose their data. They need to decide which structures and terms will be best recognised by others...

  9. Ondersteuningsartikel: What data quality checks does the ALA do?

    When data is uploaded into the ALA: georeferences are checked, i.e. to ensure that the latitude and longitude have not been transposed etc the current species name is determined and allocated to the record completeness of the record is assessed. Results of these checks are published in the ALA and full details of any changes made are viewed by clicking on the Compare 'original vs processed’ values button on the occurrence record page; see next image...

  10. Ondersteuningsartikel: ALA on GitHub

    The ALA platform is developed as open source. You can access our projects on ALA on GitHub and from there you can fork any project and commit your own changes. While you are doing this, don't forget to check the Living Atlases page to see how you can join our community.