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eWasp App vs Plants of South Eastern NSW Usage & Stats
The eWasp mobile app is an easy-to-use GPS mapping tool that allows the user to report a European wasp (eWasp) nest or sighting and European honey bee hives and swarms by dropping a pin on the location, on public, commercial & residential land. Users have access to submit a nest report with camera capability, view map, other wasps & information, ID an insect or arachnid with camera capability, first aid & safety, listed Pest Control Companies, the eWasp website and eWasp contact details.
The eWasp app map displays active European wasp nests and sightings, and Honey bee hives on public and commercial land only. Residential land reports will not be displayed on the map.
Users can use the app map to view/search locations for active eWasp nests or sightings and European honey bee hives. By tapping on the yellow & black pin, the word “eWasp Nest” or “eWasp Sighting” or “Honey Bee Hive” will be displayed. Once the eWasp nest or sighting has been actioned, the pin will disappear from the map. Active European honey bee hive pins will remain active on the map.
Upon opening the app, users will see a main menu with a list of options to select from. Once a report is submitted, the report is sent to the eWasp Team to action.
The eWasp app also offers Remote Area Reporting for out of service areas. Reports will be automatically sent to the eWasp team when internet connection is available on your device.
NEW – The eWasp app now has a state selection field in the reporting section of the app. The Remote Area Reporting now has a comments box for additional information.
When reporting eWasp nests on Residential land, a link to the eWasp listed pest controllers will be available/displayed upon submitting the report.
When reporting European honey bee hives & swarms on Residential and Commercial land, a link to the Beekeepers Association will be available/displayed upon submitting the report.
Any questions, please contact us. We look forward to working with you.
The eWasp Team.
eWasp mobile app is developed by Subz Designs.
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This key is designed for anyone who has an interest in finding out about the plants of south eastern New South Wales. It includes 3209 species, accompanied by about 15,000 images.
The key uses a limited number of easily seen characters using a minimum of technical terms to help with identification of plants. It is not designed to key out to a single species, though sometimes it does. It is designed to narrow down the possibilities of what the plant might be to a limited number of species. The photos may then help you decide what your plant is.
Routine use of a hand lens or a macro app on your mobile phone will make identification easier, in particular for the feature Number of florets/tiny flowers in a flower head.
Area covered by the key
The northern boundary is at 33.4° S, i.e. from Gosford and Bathurst to about 60 km NNW of West Wyalong. The western boundary is at 146.9° E, about 60 km NNW of West Wyalong to Albury. The southern boundary is the NSW/Victorian border.
Plant Distributions
Plant distributions are derived from the maps generated for individual species in Spatial Portal, Atlas of Living Australia https://spatial.ala.org.au/ and from personal observation, and occasionally from the NSW Department of Environment and Heritage Bionet Atlas http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/atlaspublicapp/UI_Modules/ATLAS_/AtlasSearch.aspx.
Records dated before 1 January 1983 have been disregarded. Distributions are given only for within the area covered by this key.
Coastal records are from east of the escarpment west of Sydney and east of the hills inland from the Princes Highway. Records in the ranges are from the escarpment west of Sydney and the hills west of the Princes Highway to the western edges of the large national parks running south from the Blue Mountains to the Victorian border. Records on the tablelands are from west of the large national parks in the ranges to the Hume Highway. The eastern boundary of the Western Slopes runs south from north of Canowindra and along the Hume Highway to Albury. A description of the Western Slopes is at https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/topics/animals-and-plants/biodiversity/bioregions/bioregions-of-nsw/south-western-slopes
Plant Names
Plant names are those in the Australian Plant Census as at March 2023. In cases where the Council of Heads of Australian Herbaria has not yet made a determination, plant names published in http://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/. Where a name is not listed in PlantNET, the names in https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/ are used.
About the author
Betty Wood, by training a pharmacologist, developed an interest in wildflowers and their identification many years ago when she first settled in Canberra. Her mother-in-law, an English botanist, helped her to learn to use botanical keys to identify Australian plants. She is co-author (with her late husband Don) of Flowers of the South Coast & Ranges of New South Wales in three volumes, Flowers of the ACT & Region, and sole author of Simple Guide to Eucalypts and Similar Trees of the South Coast and Ranges of NSW (Including the Illawarra and Southern Highlands) and the Lucid key and app Plants and Fungi of South Western New South Wales.
Feedback
With about 3,000 manually entered species, there are sure to be mistakes in this key.
Please advise me of such, or give me suggestions about how the key could be improved. Photos that users send me to fill in the gaps would be greatly appreciated. My email address is woodb9179@gmail.com
This App is powered by LucidMobile, for more information please visit https://www.lucidcentral.org
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eWasp App VS.
Plants of South Eastern NSW
January 6, 2025