Given I've just spent the week before last assisting with the yearly seabird monitoring on the uninhabited Shiant Islands in the Hebrides, Scotland, I've made a start with the most recent batch of recovery data from the Shiants Auk Ringing Group. So here's my first offering - an interactive map showing recovery locations of seabirds originally ringed on the Shiant Islands, Scotland. A recovery is a record of a ringed bird that is found in a location other than where it was originally ringed, and could occur when it is recaptured alive and well at a ringing site somewhere else, or may come from a member of the public finding a dead ringed bird and reporting it to the BTO Ringing Scheme.
The map: There's a variety of open source services offering the ability to host your own mapping online, all coming with different tools, background maps and payment plans aimed more at commercial use, with most offering entry level functionality with free access. For this first map I've had a play with Mangomap which has proven to be extremely easy to use, and I had my first map up and running within a few minutes. Looks like they have very good support too given the amount of friendly emails I've received since signing up! I simply uploaded a CSV containing all the recovery data plus decimal lat/lon coordinates for each recovery location; the only requirement for Mangomap to recognise the coordinates was for the column headers to be named lat and lon - no GIS required. The time is in getting all the data ready in your CSV first - eg links to photos etc. Admittedly the lines shown on the map required a bit more faffing prior to uploading, but were simple enough to create in shapefile format by converting WKT linestrings for each coordinate pair (ringing location and finding location) using QGIS.
Mangomap takes several input formats including CSV, SHP and KML/KMZ and allows you to customise the features on the map, although with the free version there's no way to turn on/off individual layers - it's all your layers or nothing. The additional tools you get if you pay include print-to-pdf and the ability to edit the data once it's uploaded, which saves having to edit and re-upload your CSV every time you want to make a change.
Mangomap takes several input formats including CSV, SHP and KML/KMZ and allows you to customise the features on the map, although with the free version there's no way to turn on/off individual layers - it's all your layers or nothing. The additional tools you get if you pay include print-to-pdf and the ability to edit the data once it's uploaded, which saves having to edit and re-upload your CSV every time you want to make a change.
Only one free map though - so maybe this will be it for my Mangomap trials? For this sort of ad hoc personal use I'd be willing to pay a small fee perhaps based on storage or a small annual charge, something more like you'd get with Flickr, but at $29pcm minimum spend this 'hobby mapper' won't be tempted to sign up yet!
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