A field guide to the flora and fauna of the Ku-ring-gai Council area in Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Species are divided into those that are native to Australia and those that are introduced.
Species in this guide are based upon data sources from both the Ku-ring-gai Municipal Council and the CSIROs Atlas of Living Australia.
Coverage of plants is intended to be complete, as is the coverage of vertebrate animals.
Coverage of fungi and invertebrates remains incomplete but progress is being made.
Species descriptions include identification photos and distribution maps. Along with information about distinguishing features, details of size, habitat preferences, diet and other details, this information provides an increasingly effective means of identifying species that can be found in Australia.
To use the guide, drill down though the species groups to find a group that you think is likely to contain the species you have observed. Then you can tap "filter" to see all identification images for species in the chosen group. You can refine the filter via the filter tab, selecting only those species that have the chosen colours. The required accuracy of the colour filter can be adjusted to refine or broaden the number of species that match your search. For groups with size and wingspan data, such as birds, you can also filter based upon size and wingspan estimates.
Once you find an image that matches, view the description details for that species to confirm the identification. Confirm by tapping the + icon to add a new record. Fill out your record details, add a sound recording or photo as evidence, then upload the record to the server so that it can be kept for posterity and shared with others.
The information in this app is the result of collaboration by many contributors. All users of this app are welcome to contribute to the quality of the app by adding descriptive details, identification photos and sound recordings. If you have knowledge that would improve the usefulness of this app. please consider adding it via the Gaia Guide website (http://gaiaguide.info/).
Use the app. to report on the species you find in your own backyard or in the neighbouring Ku-ring-gai bushland. Your records and photos will improve the quality of this guide and will also be available to council bio-diversity officers and researchers using the Atlas of Living Australia.