chub_on_the_block
Well-known member
Theres several interesting mapping sites and the usefulness of google earth in finding places to fish, exploring aerial info etc cropped up in a thread recently.
The site below also has aerial / map stuff, but you can also search for the distribution of species (fish, insects, mammals, birds, plants etc). Recommended to the naturalists out there and those who wonder precisely where and when Burbot (or whatever) was last recorded in Britain.
You can play also around with date ranges too - eg. Carassius carassius (crucian) shows a marked decline over the years.
National Biodiversity Network Gateway
The site below also has aerial / map stuff, but you can also search for the distribution of species (fish, insects, mammals, birds, plants etc). Recommended to the naturalists out there and those who wonder precisely where and when Burbot (or whatever) was last recorded in Britain.
You can play also around with date ranges too - eg. Carassius carassius (crucian) shows a marked decline over the years.
National Biodiversity Network Gateway