期刊名称:ECOLOGY LETTERS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Aims and Scope |
Ecology Letters is a forum for the very rapid publication of original research in ecology. Manuscripts relating to the ecology of all taxa, in any biome and geographic area will be considered, and priority will be given to those papers exploring or testing clearly stated hypotheses. The journal publishes concise papers that merit urgent publication by virtue of their originality, general interest and their contribution to new developments in ecology. We discourage purely descriptive papers and those merely confirming or extending results of previous work.
OnlineEarly Now Available Ecology Letters now publishes OnlineEarly papers - fully reviewed and revised articles published online in advance of publication in a forthcoming printed issue. OnlineEarly papers do not carry volume page numbers.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Ecology Letters is interested in submissions in the following areas: microbial ecology, conservation ecology, ecological genomics, global change ecology, spatial ecology, functional ecology, cognitive ecology, multi-trophic level interactions and restoration ecology.
Four types of article are published in Ecology Letters:
- Letters: exciting findings in fast-moving areas
- Ideas and Perspectives: short, novel essays for a general audience;
- Reports: more lengthy research findings of general interest;
- Reviews: syntheses of important subjects which merit urgent coverage.
CALL FOR IDEAS AND PERSPECTIVES
Ecology Letters is particularly interested in short, novel essays expressing new ideas and perspectives that will appeal to a wide ecological audience. Decisions on these manuscripts are made within 4 to 6 weeks of submission, depending on manuscript length.
Ecology Letters Review Articles Are Free To Download
More than 99% of editorial decisions were made within our published limits in 2002. Time to first editorial decision is 4 weeks for Ideas, 5 weeks for Letters, 6 weeks for Reports, and 8 weeks for Reviews. The publishers, Blackwell Publishing, work on a 5-week production schedule. A press release service is provided for selected articles (Click Here).
NEW! A fast-track review process for exceptionally novel, high profile submissions following contact with, and approval by, the Editor-in-Chief. | |
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Instructions to Authors
Submission and handling of manuscripts
Ecology Letters encourages online submission of manuscripts at http://ele.manuscriptcentral.com. Submission online enables the quickest possible review and allows online manuscript tracking. On initial submission authors can either submit separate text and figure files or a single .doc or .rtf file with embedded images (from which a PDF file will automatically be created upon upload). Full instructions and support are available online from the submission site. The Copyright Agreement Form and the Colour Work Agreement Form (see below for details) must be signed by the corresponding author and sent to the Editorial Office by post (these forms are also available from the manuscript submission web site), post forms to: Ecology Letters ISEM - University of Montpellier II Place Eug鑞e Bataillon, CC 065 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5 France Tel: +33 4 67 14 36 67 Fax: +33 4 67 14 36 67 email: ecolets@isem.univ-montp2.fr
Editorial Assistant: Francine Roussel
Note that no editorial decision will be transmitted to the corresponding author before receipt of these two documents.
Authors who cannot submit their manuscript at the Ecology Letters manuscript submission website should send one copy of the manuscript and a disk containing both text and tables to the Editorial Office (see address above). Please do not duplicate your submission by submitting online and by post. Please note that handling of manuscripts submitted online will be quicker.
Papers (manuscript, figures, etc.) will not be returned to authors, and authors should therefore keep copies for revision. Two sets of the original figure artwork (please do not send photocopies) should be provided.
Authors are requested to submit the names and emails of 4 potential referees working outside their institution. Such suggestions will be regarded as a guide only and the Editors are under no obligation to follow them. The Editor-in-Chief will select the most appropriate Editor to manage review of each manuscript. Authors may also indicate referees they would prefer were not used to review the manuscript. The covering letter to the Editorial Office should succinctly describe why the enclosed work is novel, exciting and of general interest in ecology. The covering letter must indicate that the enclosed work has not been published or accepted for publication, and is not under consideration for publication, in another journal or book; that its submission for publication has been approved by all relevant authors and institutions; and that all persons entitled to authorship have been so named. Submitting authors must by their signature indicate that all authors have seen and agreed to the submitted version of the manuscript. All listed authors will be sent an acknowledgment of submission.
Editorial decisions for Ideas and Letters will be made within 4 and 5 weeks of receipt, respectively. Decisions for Reports will be made within at most 6 weeks of receipt. Decisions for Reviews will usually be made within 8 weeks. Please note that the above decision times apply to manuscripts once all the required material (text, figures, cover letter, novelty statement) has been received by the Editorial Office. Accepted manuscripts will be published within 6-10 weeks of receipt by the publisher.
Presentation of manuscripts Manuscripts should be written in clear, concise, and grammatically correct English; manuscripts that are inadequately prepared will be returned to the authors. Manuscripts submitted by non-native English speakers must be thoroughly corrected by a native English speaker prior to submission. All pages should be numbered consecutively. Please indicate the word count of the full text, excluding abstract, references, tables and figure legends, on the accompanying covering letter.
Types of articles Letters should be no more than 2000 words in length and contain no more than three figures and/or tables and 30 references. There is no formal length restriction on Ideas and Perspectives except that they should be kept as brief as possible. Reports should be between 2000 and 5000 words in length and have no more than six figures and/or tables and 50 references. Reviews should be no more than 7500 words and contain no more than 10 figures or tables and 80 references.
Reviews Reviews are usually solicited, and authors interested in submitting Reviews should first send a one paragraph proposal (no more than 300 words) to the Review Editor, Professor Leon Blaustein. This proposal should express the overall contribution the review will make to the discipline, novel principles emerging over the past several years, and directions for future research.
Title page The title page should contain the article title, full name(s) of all author(s), affiliation(s), e-mail address(es) of all author(s), a short running title (abbreviated form of title) of less than 45 characters including spaces, up to 10 keywords for indexing purposes, the type of article (Letter, Idea, Report or Review), the number of words in the abstract and in the manuscript as a whole, the number of references, and the name and complete mailing address (including telephone and fax numbers and e-mail address) of the person to whom correspondence should be sent. It is very important that the key words be chosen carefully.
Abstract page The abstract page should contain a short summary not exceeding 150 words for Letters and Reports, 100 words for Ideas, and 200 words for Reviews. All papers should include up to 10 keywords.
Main text
(1) Introduction. The introduction should summarize briefly the background and aims, and end with a very brief statement of what has been achieved by the work.
(2) Material and methods. This section should contain sufficient detail so that all procedures can be repeated (in conjunction with cited references).
(3) Results. The Results section should present the experiments that support the conclusions to be drawn later in the Discussion. The Results section should conform to a high standard of rigour. Extended lines of inference, arguments or speculations should not be placed in the Results.
(4) Discussion. The Discussion section should be separate from the Results section. It allows authors to propose their interpretation of the results, and to suggest what they might mean in a wider context. It should end with a clear statement of the main conclusions of the research, and a clear explanation of their importance and relevance.
(5) Acknowledgements. The acknowledgements (e.g. of financial support) should be brief.
(6) References. References to paper by up to two authors in the text should be in full, e.g. (Able & Charles 1986). If the number of authors exceeds two, they should always be abbreviated thus: (Frank et al. 1986). When different groups of authors with the same first author and date occur, they should be cited thus: (James et al. 1986a, b). References should be listed in chronological order in the text, e.g. (Lowe et al. 1986; Able et al. 1997). At the end of the paper, references should be listed in alphabetical order. Names and initials of all authors, year of publication, the full titles of papers, chapters and books, the abbreviated journal titles (standard abbreviations), volumes and inclusive pagination should be provided. Examples of reference style are given below:
Ferris, C., King, R.A. & Gray, A.J. (1997). Molecular evidence for the maternal parentage in the hybrid origin of Spartina anglica C.E. Hubbard. Mol. Ecol., 6, 185-187.
Begon, M., Harper, J. & Townsend, C. (1996). Ecology: Individuals, Populations and Communities. 3rd edn. Blackwell Science, Oxford.
Milligan, B. (1992). Plant DNA isolation. In: Molecular Genetic Analysis of Populations: A Practical Approach (ed. Hoelzel, A.R.). IRL Press, Oxford, pp. 59-88.
References to a paper 'in press' are permissible provided that it has been accepted for publication (documentary evidence of acceptance must be provided) and should appear as follows:
Wolf, J.O. (1997). J. Anim. Ecol., in press
A reference to 'unpublished work' should be accompanied by the names of all persons concerned; any person cited as the source of a 'personal communication' must have approved the reference; both of these types of citation are permitted in the text only, not in the list of references. The use of 'in preparation' or 'submitted for publication' is not permitted.
References to material available on the World Wide Web can be given, but only if the information is available on an official site and without charge to readers. Authors may provide electronic copies of the cited material for inclusion on the Ecology Letters Homepage at the discretion of the Editors. The format for citations is as follows:
Beckleheimer, J. (1994) How do you cite URL's in a bibliography? [WWW document]. URL http://www.nrlssc.navy.mil/meta/bibliography.html
Specifications
Tables Tables should be cited consecutively in the text and numbered with Arabic numerals (Table 1, Table 2, etc.). Each table should be titled and typed double-spaced on a separate sheet. Units must be clearly indicated for each of the entries in the table. Footnotes to tables should be identified by the symbols * ?nbsp;???(in that order) and placed at the bottom of the table. No vertical rules should be used.
Figures Figures should be cited consecutively in the text by Arabic numerals (Fig. 1, Fig. 2, etc.). Titles and legends should be typed double-spaced on a separate sheet. All figures should be submitted in such form as to permit reproduction without retouching or redrawing. Line drawings should be professionally drawn, or generated by high-resolution computer graphics, on paper no larger than that used for typing the text. For full instructions, see our Electronic Artwork Information for Authors page. Lettering on the figures should be of good quality and of a size that allows for eventual reduction of the figures. Glossy prints, as rich in contrast as possible, of half-tone figures (photographs) should be provided.
Scientific names Give the Latin names of each species in full, together with the authority for its name, at first mention in the main text. If there are many species, cite a flora or checklist which may be consulted for authorities instead of listing them in the text. Do not give authorities for species cited from published references. Give priority to scientific names in the text (with colloquial names in parentheses, if desired).
Units and symbols Authors are requested to use the International System of Units (S.I., Syst鑝e International d'Unit閟) where possible for all measurements (see Quantities, Units and Symbols, 2nd edn, 1975, The Royal Society (London). Note that mathematical expressions should contain symbols not abbreviations. If the paper contains many symbols, it is recommended that they should be defined as early in the text as possible, or within a subsection of the Materials and methods section.
Page charges and colour figures
There are no page charges for publication in Ecology Letters. However, the full cost of publishing colour figures must be met by the authors. These are ?50 for the 1st figure, ?75 each for the 2nd, 3rd and 4th figures, and ?00 each for all additional figures (exclusive of VAT). A signed copy of the completed Colour Work Agreement Form must be returned to the publisher before colour work can be processed. If you are unable to download the form, please contact the Production Editor (at the address below). Once completed, please return the form to:
Stephen Jones Production Editor Blackwell Publishing Ltd 9600 Garsington Road Oxford OX4 2DQ stephen.jones@oxon.blackwellpublishing.com
Any article received by Blackwell Publishing with colour work will not be published until the form has been returned.
Authors may submit for consideration by the Editor-in-Chief colour photographs for publication on the front cover. Authors should provide a short legend, indicating to which paper the photograph relates to.
Proofs and offprints
Proofs will be sent as PDF files to the corresponding author, together with an offprint order form. Only corrections and essential changes should be made at this stage. Authors will be charged for extensive alterations. To avoid delay in publication, corrected proofs should be returned to the publisher within 48 hours of receipt. The Editors reserve the right to make minor modifications to manuscripts that do not conform to accepted standards. Such alterations will always be submitted to the authors for approval at the proof stage. A PDF file of the published article will be provided free of charge to the corresponding author. Paper offprints may be purchased if ordered on the form sent with the proofs.
OnlineEarly publication Ecology Letters is covered by Blackwell Publishing抯 OnlineEarly service. OnlineEarly articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather than having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. OnlineEarly articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and the author抯 final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in their final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of OnlineEarly articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so OnlineEarly articles cannot be cited in the traditional way. They are therefore given a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which allows the article to be cited and tracked before it is allocated to an issue. After print publication, the DOI remains valid and can continue to be used to cite and access the article.
Copyright
Ecology Letters is published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd in collaboration with the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France. Authors will be required to assign copyright of their paper to the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Blackwell Publishing. Copyright assignment is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless copyright has been assigned. (Papers subject to government or Crown copyright are exempt from this requirement). Download the Copyright Assignment Form here. The publishers will not refuse any reasonable request by authors for permission to reproduce their contributions to the journal.
Registration of sequences
DNA sequences published in Ecology Letters should be deposited in the EMBL/GenBank/DDJB Nucleotide Sequence Databases. An accession number for each sequence must be included in the manuscript before publication.
Additional material
Submission of a research article to Ecology Letters implies that the authors are prepared to distribute freely (or at a nominal price) to academic researchers for their own use any materials (e.g. strains, clones, antibodies, etc.) used in the experiments described. An investigator who feels that reasonable requests have not been met by the authors should correspond with the Editor-in-Chief. Authors must use the appropriate database to deposit detailed information supplementing submitted papers, and quote the accession number in their manuscripts. In addition to regular journal material, Ecology Letters offers the opportunity to publish extra material via its website, such as video, extra colour figures, large data sets. Please note however that only relevant, good quality and material of particular interest will be published on the internet. The material published on the internet cannot be used as sole evidence for the print version of the article. Please find full instructions on our Submission of Supplementary Material page.
Editorial Board
Editorial Information
Editor-in-Chief Michael Hochberg Génétique et Environnement ISEM - University of Montpellier II Place Eugène Bataillon, CC 065 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5 France e-mail: Eic@Univ-Montp2.Fr Biological control, host-parasite interactions, population dynamics, evolution
Editorial Office Nathalie Espuno Editorial Assistant Génétique et Environnement ISEM - University of Montpellier II Place Eugène Bataillon, CC 065 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5 France e-mail: ecolets@univ-montp2.fr
Associate Editors Shahid Naeem Department of Ecology Evolution and Environmental Biology Columbia University Schermerhorn Extension 10th Floor, Mail Code 5557 1200 Amsterdam Avenue New York NY 10027 USA e-mail: Sn2121@Columbia.Edu
Nicholas J Gotelli Department of Biology University of Vermont Burlington VT 05405 USA Tel: +1 802 656 0450 Fax: +1 802 656 2914 e-mail: ngotelli@zoo.uvm.edu
Jonathan Chase Department of Biology Washington University in St. Louis Campus Box 1137 One Brookings Drive St. Louis MO 63130-4899 USA Tel: +1 314 935 4105 Fax: +1 314 935 4432 e-mail: el.reviews@biology2.wustl.edu
Editors Priyanga Amarasekare, USA e-mail: amarasek@uchicago.edu Theoretical ecology, spatial dynamics, species interactions, consumer-resource dynamics
Marti J. Anderson, New Zealand e-mail: mja@stat.auckland.ac.nz Analysis of community data, biodiversity, statistics, environmental impact, experimental design, multivariate analysis
Minus van Baalen, France e-mail: minus.van.baalen@ens.fr Evolution of population interactions, spatial dynamics, group and kin selection, communication
Richard D. Bardgett, UK email: r.bardgett@lancaster.ac.uk Soil ecology, soil biodiversity and ecosystem function, herbivory,nitrogen and carbon cycling, terrestrial ecology
Jordi Bascompte, Spain e-mail: bascompte@ebd.csic.es Food webs, plant-animal interactions, theoretical ecology, spatial ecology
Steven R Beissinger, USA e-mail: beis@nature.berkeley.edu Behavioral ecology, tropical birds, conservation biology, endangered species, life history strategies, parental care strategies, population models, wildlife ecology
David R. Bellwood, Australia e-mail: david.bellwood@jcu.edu.au Coral Reefs, Biogeography, Ecosystem Function, Fishes, Herbivory, Resilience
Janne Bengtsson, Sweden e-mail: Jan.Bengtsson@evp.slu.se Metacommunities, agricultural landscapes, ecosystem functioning, ecosystem services, natural resource management, soil ecology
Tim Benton, UK e-mail: T.G.Benton@leeds.ac.uk Life-history; population biology; evolutionary biology; conservation ecology; agricultural ecology; theoretical ecology
Bernd Blasius, Germany e-mail: bernd@agnld.uni-potsdam.de Theoretical ecology, spatial ecology, population dynamics, modeling, synchronization, outbreaks, infectious diseases
Michael Bonsall, UK e-mail: michael.bonsall@zoo.ox.ac.uk Population Biology, theoretical ecology, evolutionary ecology, spatial dynamics, species interactions, consumer-resource dynamics
Jerome Chave, France e-mail: chave@cict.fr biodiversity models, population dynamics, statistical physics, tropical forests, carbon cycle in the tropics, allometry
Jean Clobert, France e-mail: jclobert@snv.jussieu.fr Life history evolution, population and metapopulation dynamics, dispersal, behavioral ecology, physiological ecology, conservation
Howard Cornell, USA e-mail: cornell@udel.edu Community, diversity, richness, local, regional, plant/animal
Ross H Crozier, Australia e-mail: Ross.Crozier@jcu.edu.au Molecular ecology, sociobiology, molecular phylogeny, conservation biology, social insects
Thomas O. Crist, USA e-mail: cristto@muohio.edu Biodiversity, habitat fragmentation, landscape ecology, macroecology, spatial analysis, animal movements, metapopulation dynamics, plant-insect interactions
Emmett Duffy, USA email: jeduffy@vims.edu Key words: biodiversity, community ecology, conservation, ecosystem functioning, evolutionary ecology, food-web, marine, plant-herbivore interactions, sociobiology, systematics
Aaron M. Ellison, USA e-mail: aellison@fas.harvard.edu Assembly rules, food webs, macroecology, statistics, wetlands
Stephen P. Ellner, USA e-mail: spe2@cornell.edu Theoretical population and evolutionary ecology, population dynamics, structured population modeling, stochastic models, spatial dynamics
Jim Elser, USA e-mail: j.elser@asu.edu Ecosystems, ecology, nutrient limitation, stoichiometry, limnology, plankton
Brian Enquist, USA e-mail: benquist@email.arizona.edu Plant functional ecology, macroecology, scaling, allometry, community ecology, ecophysiology, tropical ecology, global ecology, ecoinformatics
John Fryxell, Canada e-mail: jfryxell@uoguelph.ca Behavioral ecology, population dynamics, spatial dynamics, harvesting, wildlife conservation
Tadashi Fukami, USA e-mail: tfukami@hawaii.edu Community assembly, ecosystem processes, species interactions, diversification, invasions, restoration
Gregor Fussmann, Canada e-mail: gregor.fussmann@mcgill.ca Population dynamics, community dynamics, evolutionary dynamics, predator-prey, food-web model, plankton, microcosm
James B. Grace, USA e-mail: Jim_Grace@usgs.gov Plant community ecology, structural equation modeling/path analysis, diversity, competition, wetland and grassland ecology
Jaco M Greeff, South Africa e-mail: jgreeff@postino.up.ac.za Sex allocation, kin selection, reproductive strategies, sperm competition
James P Grover, USA e-mail: grover@exchange.uta.edu Community ecology, theoretical ecology, microbial ecology, aquatic ecology
Kevin Gross, USA e-mail: kevin_gross@ncsu.edu Theoretical ecology, statistics, population dynamics, community dynamics, biological control
Jessica Gurevich, USA e-mail: jgurvtch@life.bio.sunysb.edu Community ecology, plant ecology, spatial processes, invasions, statistics
Sally D Hacker, USA e-mail: hacker@vancouver.wsu.edu Community ecology, species diversity, plant invasions, plant-herbivore interactions
John Harte, USA e-mail: jharte@socrates.berkeley.edu Abundance, spatial distribution, species-area relationship, scaling, self similarity, global change ecology
Fangliang He, Canada e-mail: fhe@ualberta.ca Spatial ecology, species diversity, community ecology, biostatistics, landscape ecology
Mikko Heino, Norway e-mail: mikko.heino@bio.uib.no Life history evolution, fisheries ecology, harvesting, spatially structured populations
Jane K Hill, UK e-mail: jkh6@york.ac.uk Climate change, habitat fragmentation, biodiversity, insect conservation
Helmut Hillebrand, Germany e-mail: helmut.hillebrand@uni-koeln.de Community ecology; food webs; ecological stoichiometry; biodiversity
Rebecca Irwin, USA e-mail: rirwin@uga.edu Pollination, herbivory, plant-animal interactions, species invasions, mutualisms, cheaters
John Jaenike, USA joja@mail.rochester.edu Host-parasite interactions, evolutionary ecology, evolutionary genetics, endosymbionts
Ferenc Jordàn, Hungary e-mail: jordan.ferenc@gmail.com Community ecology, landscape ecology, network analysis, food web, keystone species, connectivity, fragmentation, network
Masakado Kawata, Japan e-mail: kawata@mail.cc.tohoku.ac.jp Individual interaction, speciation, divergence, population structure, evolution, individual-based model
David Kleijn, The Netherlands e-mail: David.Kleijn@wur.nl Keywords: biodiversity, spatial ecology, landscape context, agro-ecology, evaluating conservation management, plant species richness, farmland birds, bumblebees
Johannes M H Knops, USA e-mail: jknops2@unl.edu Ecosystem ecology, nutrient cycling, plant ecology, biogeochemistry, biological invasions and biodiversity
Jacob Koella, UK e-mail: jkoella@gmail.com Evolutionary ecology, life history theory, parasitism, coevolution
Marcel M Lambrechts, France e-mail: lambrechts@cefe.cnrs-mop.fr Birds, population biology, evolutionary ecology, behavioural ecology
Thomas Lenormand, France e-mail: thomas.lenormand@cefe.cnrs.fr Population genetics, genetic systems, evolution, adaptation, ecological genetics
Giulio de Leo, Italy e-mail: giulio.deleo@unipr.it Population dynamics, host-parasite dynamics, Renewable Resource Management, Fishery management, Population Viability Analysis
Richard L. Lindroth, USA e-mail: lindroth@entomology.wisc.edu Carbon dioxide, genetic variation, global change, herbivory, phytochemistry, plant defense, plant-herbivore interactions
Björn Malmqvist, Sweden e-mail: bjorn.malmqvist@emg.umu.se Keywords: biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, freshwater invertebrate communities, streams and rivers, disturbances, decomposition, land-water interactions
Thomas E Miller, USA e-mail: miller@bio.fsu.edu Community ecology, evolution and species interactions, invasion biology
Vojtech Novotny, Czech Republic e-mail: novotny@entu.cas.cz Tropical forests, plant-insect interactions, insect communities, biodiversity, herbivory, food webs, conservation ecology
Josep Peñuelas, Spain email: josep.penuelas@uab.es Plant ecophysiology, ecosystem function, global change, atmosphere-biosphere interactions, remote sensing, Mediterranean ecosystems
Owen Petchey, UK Email: o.petchey@shef.ac.uk Keywords: Community dynamics, food webs, extinctions, ecosystem functioning, functional diversity, ciliates, biodiversity, community structure, microcosms, models
Wim H. van der Putten, The Netherlands e-mail: W.vanderPutten@nioo.knaw.nl Soil ecology, plant-soil feedback, multitrophic interactions, linking above-belowground, plant defence, soil pathogens, nematodes, biological invasions
Paul Rainey, New Zealand e-mail: p.b.rainey@massey.ac.nz Experimental evolution, microbial genetics, population genetics
Helen Regan, USA Email: hregan@sciences.sdsu.edu Keywords: quantitative conservation ecology, population models, uncertainty analysis, decision theory, risk assessment
Marcel Rejmanek, USA e-mail: mrejmanek@ucdavis.edu Plant communities, plant invasions, regeneration of tropical forests, seed dispersal
Oswald Schmitz, USA e-mail: oswald.schmitz@yale.edu Behavior to community scaling, biodiversity and ecosystem function, predator-prey dynamics, global climate change, plant-herbivore interactions, trophic interactions
Katriona Shea, USA e-mail: k-shea@psu.edu Biological invasions, theoretical ecology, applied theoretical ecology, population dynamics, dispersal
Gabriele Sorci, France e-mail: gsorci@snv.jussieu.fr Behavioural ecology, ecological immunology, life history, evolution, sexual selection
David Storch, Czech Republic e-mail: storch@cts.cuni.cz Macroecology, biodiversity patterns, spatial ecology, bird community ecology
Katharine Suding, USA Email ksuding@uci.edu. Keywords: alternative states, community structure, competition and coexistence, dispersal, ecosystem function, functional traits, invasion/invasive species, nitrogen cycling, plant-soil feedbacks, restoration, species loss.
Jennifer S. Thaler. USA e-mail: jst37@cornell.edu Plant-insect interactions, herbivory, chemical ecology, tritrophic interactions, insect ecology, indirect effects
Peter H Thrall, Australia e-mail: peter.thrall@csiro.au Coevolution, parasitism, symbiosis, metapopulation dynamics, host behavior & disease, conservation
Wilfried Thuiller, France Email : wilfried.thuiller@ujf-grenoble.fr Keywords: Spatial ecology, Species distribution modelling, Global change biology, Biodiversity, Dynamic modelling, Biogeography, Functional plant ecology
Ted Turlings, Switzerland e-mail: ted.turlings@unine.ch Chemical ecology, plant-insect ecology, tritrophic interactions
Sergey Venevskiy, UK e-mail: S.Venevsky@leeds.ac.uk Global change biology, fire ecology, permafrost ecology, species diversity at the global scale
Claus Wedekind, Switzerland e-mail: claus.wedekind@eawag.ch MHC and selection, behaviour and life histories, sexual selection, conservation genetics, experimental tests of game theory
Tim Wootton Email: twootton@uchicago.edu Experimental ecology, community ecology, marine ecology, river ecology, indirect effects, food web, interaction strength
Boris Worm, Canada e-mail: bworm@dal.ca Marine conservation, biodiversity science, human impacts, aquatic food webs
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