Data

Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii) - occurrence records filtered for species distribution modelling

James Cook University
Vanderwal, J
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/457c3f399c1a63267fd780d5f5171ebe&rft.title=Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii) - occurrence records filtered for species distribution modelling &rft.identifier=https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/457c3f399c1a63267fd780d5f5171ebe&rft.publisher=Centre for Tropical Biodiversity & Climate Change, James Cook University&rft.description=This dataset includes observations of Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii) that are sourced from the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) database. Rather than raw observations, these have been filtered such that they are assumed to be suitable for species distribution modelling exercises. The cleaning process included: automatic vetting based on the ALA's 'assertions' whereby observations were assessed as inappropriate for modelling (ie. 'ZERO_COORDINATES', 'INVALID SCIENTIFIC NAME'); determining if the observations fell within expert-derived range polygons. These polygons were supplied by BirdLife Australia to represent, for each species, its core breeding habitat, non-breeding, historic, irruptive, or invasive ranges. Records that fall outside these ranges were marked as inappropriate for modelling; and human-derived classification of records after previous two assessments. Through the Edgar project (http://tropicaldatahub.org/goto/edgar), users were able to map all species observations and comment on the suitability of records for distribution modelling. This included records deemed inappropriate by other means. Every 6 months the occurrence record download file is updated to reflect recent vetting by experts. In the data download, sensitive records have been obfuscated by truncating the lat/long to two decimal places. Obfuscated records will be indicated in the data file. Access to the accurate data will need to be arranged with the original data owners - contact the ALA for more information. The resulting downloadable file of occurrence records reflects which records are suitable for species distribution modelling.Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii) occurrence records from continental Australia suitable for species distribution modelling.&rft.creator=Vanderwal, J &rft.date=2013&rft.coverage=144.497703748,-9.91029347568 133.0719225,-9.91029347568 121.646141252,-13.182069379 110.923485004,-21.2339713912 114.790672503,-38.3639598931 132.54457875,-35.2688432623 147.837547497,-46.5179669197 158.384422495,-24.1526559825 144.497703748,-9.91029347568&rft.coverage=Continental Australia&rft_rights=&rft_rights=CC BY: Attribution 3.0 AU http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au&rft_subject=species occurrence records&rft_subject=Terrestrial Ecology&rft_subject=BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=ECOLOGY&rft_subject=Conservation and Biodiversity&rft_subject=ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT&rft_subject=Climate Change Adaptation Measures&rft_subject=ENVIRONMENT&rft_subject=CLIMATE AND CLIMATE CHANGE&rft_subject=Climate Change Mitigation Strategies&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Brief description

Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii) occurrence records from continental Australia suitable for species distribution modelling.

Full description

This dataset includes observations of Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii) that are sourced from the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) database. Rather than raw observations, these have been filtered such that they are assumed to be suitable for species distribution modelling exercises. The cleaning process included:

  1. automatic vetting based on the ALA's 'assertions' whereby observations were assessed as inappropriate for modelling (ie. 'ZERO_COORDINATES', 'INVALID SCIENTIFIC NAME');
  2. determining if the observations fell within expert-derived range polygons. These polygons were supplied by BirdLife Australia to represent, for each species, its core breeding habitat, non-breeding, historic, irruptive, or invasive ranges. Records that fall outside these ranges were marked as inappropriate for modelling; and
  3. human-derived classification of records after previous two assessments. Through the Edgar project (http://tropicaldatahub.org/goto/edgar), users were able to map all species observations and comment on the suitability of records for distribution modelling. This included records deemed inappropriate by other means.

    Every 6 months the occurrence record download file is updated to reflect recent vetting by experts. In the data download, sensitive records have been obfuscated by truncating the lat/long to two decimal places. Obfuscated records will be indicated in the data file. Access to the accurate data will need to be arranged with the original data owners - contact the ALA for more information.

    The resulting downloadable file of occurrence records reflects which records are suitable for species distribution modelling.

Notes

Data is downloadable as a zipped CSV file.

These occurrence records are displayed on Edgar: http://tropicaldatahub.org/goto/Edgar.

Created: 2013-02-28

Data time period: 31 12 1899

This dataset is part of a larger collection

144.4977,-9.91029 133.07192,-9.91029 121.64614,-13.18207 110.92349,-21.23397 114.79067,-38.36396 132.54458,-35.26884 147.83755,-46.51797 158.38442,-24.15266 144.4977,-9.91029

134.6539537495,-28.21413019769

text: Continental Australia

Identifiers
  • Local : jcu.edu.au/tdh/collection/Double-barred Finch (Taeniopygia bichenovii)/occurrences
  • Local : https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/457c3f399c1a63267fd780d5f5171ebe