EDIT mapViewer allows the user to download a file containing all the necessary information to ‘restore’ the currently viewed area (and geographic layers).
It doesn’t include user point data, GBIF or symbolized layers and map complements like windrose and scalebar.
When you upload your project (a JSON file), you should keep visualizing your currently data AND the data (layers) stored in the project.
This feature only works in latitude/longitude projection.
You only can use this tool in latitude/longitude ‘projection’ (EPSG 4326)
Choose the geographic projection you need for your map and apply it. Make sure first this is the projection you need!
!
Your data will be reprojected and automatically zoomed to the area the selected projection has sense.
You can easily get distorted maps if the geographic layers used are very general (high scale layers like ‘mundial countries’) and reproject to a local projection.
That’s the reason why some layers like ‘Administrative’ have been classified in different groups. !
So, if you reproject to an European projection be sure to use only some of the european administrative layers (even in that case, depending on the scale you are, you can create distorted maps).
All geographic layers should be splitted on the future on more little parts to avoid distortions.
Navigating around using a different projection than WGS84 (latitude/longitude) can cause a performance slowdown.
You cannot upload CSV when you are on a different projection than latitude/longitude (EPSG 4326 code)
You only can use this tool in latitude/longitude ‘projection’ (EPSG 4326)
You can use Google and Yahoo maps as background
. These maps use a particular projection, EPSG:900913, so that all the layers will be reprojected to fit it.
You cannot reproject these maps to another projection and cannot upload your CSV file if you are visualizing these maps.
You can switch to latitude/longitude in the same dropdown list, upload your CSV data and switch to Google&Yahoo maps.
After choosing which commercial map you desire you will be zoomed to a general view, so you have to navigate again to your area of interest.
We provide you the tools to print your map at different resolutions and image formats
For each resolution you have to choose an image size. This is the size
your resulting image has to be transformed to get the desired resolution for printing.
You can easily change image dimensions to include on a text processor (OpenOffice, Word) using "Properties" of the incrustated image.
Be aware that high resolutions may mean about a few MegaBytes image file.
You can also print:
-the map scalebar
-the map legend
-your symbolized point data legend
-the key map (a map showing your currently visualized area)
Some of these layers (and/or its label) are not visible at some zooming level (or scale).
Layer symbolization (stroke color, width, fill color…) is possible in a few layers, but unfortunately the legend will not correspond to this new generated style.
You can create your polygon on the screen, symbolize it, add a label and get it on the final image for printing.
You must activate first the “Query & Draw module”.
To stop drawing the polygon just make a double-click
It's specially interesting if we don't provide a layer you need as background (for example, a natural park, or your area of study) but you know (or you can determine) its shape using other background information.
Also adding annotations can be very useful. You can even set up the polygon opacity to ‘0‘ (also the stroke opacity to ‘0‘) if you just want to annotate something (eg:"here I found specie X");
After uploading your data you can perform a Spatial Analysis over a user selected polygonal layer (e.g: UTM squares, quadricules of different resolutions…)
You get three different maps, each one with it's own legend:
1) Map of sampling effort (number of records in each polygonal entity)
2) Map of taxonomic richness (number of genera in each polygonal entity)
3) Taxa/record relationship
After performing a Spatial Analysis operation, you can hover the polygons and get the analysis results of the data contained on the hovered polygon (use ‘Interactive analysis’ tool)
A review of the available scientific information on the possibilities and usefulness of the compiled species distribution data for basic and applied purposes is available for download at http://wp5.e-taxonomy.eu/blog/files_edit_wp5/2007-07-26_D5.35_&_D5.38.doc