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  • Sectie: Ondersteuningsartikel
  1. Ondersteuningsartikel: 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...

  2. Ondersteuningsartikel: How do I license something?

    If you need to nominate a license type when completing an online ALA form, the form will have the necessary fields for you to choose from. If you intend to provide regular data uploads please nominate your license in your discussions with the ALA Data Management team to cover all the data you provide to the ALA. See also Terms of Use for information on the conditions under which the ALA is used. For more information on licensing contact support@ala.org.au.

  3. Ondersteuningsartikel: What licencing conditions apply to my information?

    This depends on the amount of data you provide and how you provide it. If you submit data through the ALA’s Record a Sighting function, it is considered to be an individual observation and a ‘fact’. Facts have no intellectual property and so do not need to be licensed, though the ALA will attribute the observation to you and license any associated images as you select. If you provide a collection of sightings, e.g...

  4. Ondersteuningsartikel: What is ZoaTrack?

    ZoaTrack is a tool for scientists developed by the Atlas of Living Australia to help calculate movement metrics and space use for individually marked animals anywhere in the world. For more information, visit ZoaTrack.

  5. Ondersteuningsartikel: What is sampling?

    The term ‘sampling’ comes from the use of the locations of species records to sample the values of any of the environmental and contextual layers available in the Spatial Portal. For example, if you have records of a species at various locations and want to find out what the annual rainfall and mean annual temperature associated with the sightings, then Sampling is how to do it...

  6. Ondersteuningsartikel: What is a scatterplot?

    A scatterplot is an X-Y graph of the sampled values of a pair of environmental variables from a set of species (or genus etc.) locations. Each point on the scatterplot represents the values of the pair of environmental values for a single occurrence record. You could for example plot mean annual temperature (short name called Bio01 in the Spatial Portal) against annual precipitation (Bio12) for say Eucalyptus gunnii (Cider Gum)...

  7. Ondersteuningsartikel: Where could the Greater Glider be?

    Ecologists, field naturalists and all sorts of people might ask such a question. The greater glider, Petauroides volans (Kerr, 1792), is Australia's largest glider, an arboreal marsupial that feeds on Eucalyptus leaves at night and shelters in tree hollows during the day. We have records of where it has been observed, but where else might it be? Species distribution models are often used to answer such questions...

  8. Ondersteuningsartikel: Scatterplot

    Please note: this guide has been written in relation to version 2.0 of the spatial portal due to brought into production in 2019. A different version of the portal will allow similar functions with some small differences in the user interface. If you are unable to access a required function, please contact support@ala.org.au. The scatterplot function links the sampled values of any two environmental variables on a species (or genus etc) with the map...

  9. Ondersteuningsartikel: Flickr images

    Note: This guide refers to version 2.0 of the spatial portal. Map images were supplied by Panoramio in previous versions of the spatial portal. Flickr is a free service that allows you to upload, view and map spatially registered images (images that have be geolocated: given a latitude and longitude). The Spatial Portal of the ALA uses the Flickr web services to tap and display any available images with a location within the displayed map window...

  10. Ondersteuningsartikel: Common Map Options

    Map Options is a special layer that is used to define the basemap displayed in the Spatial Portal, to allow the user to add in their own layer via WMS, and reset the Spatial Portal. The basemaps are treated as a single underlying map layer. Clicking on Map options opens the layer. The options relating to the Map Options layer are all within the Legend Pane, as shown in the image above...