GIS In Ecology will be offering two new short GIS courses for biologists in 
February 2015. These courses will be held in Glasgow in Scotland, and will be 
taught by Dr. Colin D. MacLeod, a biological researcher with more than 15 years 
experience in using GIS. Each course will run for two days, with the second 
course being held directly after the first to make it logistically easier for 
those wanting to do both courses. These courses are:


1. An Introduction To Investigating The Home Ranges Of Individual Animals (9 – 
10 February 2015): This course will provide an introduction to investigating 
the home ranges of individual animals using a GIS-based approach. It will cover 
how to create a minimum convex polygon (MCP), how to create a kernel density 
estimate (KDE) in environments with and without barriers to movements, how to 
create 50 and 95% percentage volume contours PVCs) and how to select an 
appropriate bandwidth/h value. This course is aimed at anyone who wishes to use 
GIS to study the home ranges of animals in either the terrestrial or aquatic 
environments, even if they have little or no existing knowledge of GIS. It will 
primarily use ArcGIS software, but it will also cover the use of ArcMET and 
Geospatial Modelling Environment (GME) for home range analyses. Duration: 2 
days. Cost: £295 (£200 for students, unwaged and those working for NGOs). 
Places will be limited to a maximum of 14 people and will be filled on a first 
come, first served basis. For more information on this course, visit 
www.gisinecology.com/Training_Course_Home_Range_February_2015.htm or email 
i...@gisinecology.com. Places can also be booked through this email address.



2. An Introduction To Creating Custom GIS Tools For Biological Research (11 – 
12 February 2015): This course will provide an introduction to the creation of 
custom GIS tools for use in all areas of biological research. Creating custom 
GIS tools for biological research allows you not only to automate frequently 
repeated tasks (saving time and reducing the risk of accidental processing 
errors), but it also allows non-GIS specialists to process and analyse data 
using standard protocols in a GIS-based environment by running a single 
easy-to-use tool. This means that creating custom GIS tool provides an 
effective way of expanding the pool of individuals within a research group or 
organisation who can carry out specific and complex GIS tasks. The course will 
consist of background session which will explain the principles of creating 
your own custom GIS tools, as well as practical exercises in which a number of 
example tools will be built and tested. There will also be the option of 
building your own custom tool to automate a task of your choice. This course 
assumes that you have at least a basic knowledge of GIS and is not aimed at 
complete beginners. It will use the ModelBuilder module of ESRI’s ArcGIS 
sofware to show how biologists can create custom GIS tools for use in their 
research. Duration: 2 days. Cost: £295 (£200 for students, unwaged and those 
working for NGOs). Places will be limited to a maximum of 14 people and will be 
filled on a first come, first served basis. For more information on this 
course, visit 
www.gisinecology.com/Training_Course_Custom_GIS_Tools_February_2015.htm  or 
email i...@gisinecology.com. Places can also be booked through this email 
address.






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