Biodiversity monitoring: Data from wildlife camera traps to the Atlas of Living Australia

"The Wildlife Observatory of Australia
(WildObs) is a national initiative transforming how Australia collects, processes, and shares data from wildlife camera traps. It brings together artificial intelligence, field monitoring standards, and open data infrastructure to create an end-to-end platform that supports large-scale biodiversity monitoring and ecological research. By streamlining the management of camera trap data—from image collection to analysis—WildObs aims to improve the consistency, accessibility, and scientific value of this rapidly growing data source." >>
https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/dp5214

A new dataset sees verified images from wildlife camera traps available in the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA).>>
https://www.ala.org.au/blogs-news/from-snapshot-to-supercharged-science-data/
#biodiversity #wildllife #atlaslivingaust #WildObs #WildlifeCam #TheAtlasOfLivingAustralia #GoFetchMyData #DataCommons

Fur seal tracking at Barunguba, NSW helps collect data about oceans

A colony of seals on the New South Wales Far South Coast has been fitted with tracking devices as researchers work to find out more about them and the environment.

ABC News

Dugong life near a big city

They "found heavy metals, pesticides, microplastics and herbicides in the tissue and circulating blood of Moreton Bay dugongs. Extreme weather can compound these urban risks.

"We know that with every flood event or cyclone there's direct damage to seagrass beds. Even if there is enough seagrass to eat, dugongs are still affected. They show increased levels of heavy metals, pathogens and microplastics after floods, and "there is a drop in body condition compared to that time in other years."

"...This population may be faring better than those further north. They're exposed to agricultural runoff, which could severely affect the dugongs".
>>
https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2025-08-12/dugongs-moreton-bay-species-marine-science-conservation/105449400
#MarineMammals #dugongs #seagrass #ocean #pesticides #herbicide #runoff #floods #MoretonBay #GBR #GoFetchMyData

Dugongs studied in Moreton Bay may help save the vulnerable species worldwide

The world's largest health study of dugongs in Moreton Bay provides critical clues for helping conserve the enigmatic marine mammal, especially in other locations where numbers are falling.

ABC News
Cameras glued to sea lions
"The sea lions were sedated while the camera was glued onto their fur, and then sedated again so it could be retrieved when a satellite tracker showed the animal had returned to land three to four days later..."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-07-10/australian-sea-lion-cam-sardi-research-footage-underwater-tagged/102582434
#GoFetchMyData #wildlife
SARDI researchers take ocean ride with endangered seals through 'sea lion cam'

Cameras are fitted to endangered Australian sea lions in a bid to document their foraging habitats, but the results have revealed so much more to excited researchers.

ABC News