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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY

ISSN:0022-0477
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/index.html
期刊网址:http://www.wiley.com/bw/permis.asp?ref=0022-0477&site=1
影响因子:6.256
主题范畴:PLANT SCIENCES;    ECOLOGY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 Journal of Ecology is published six times a year and includes original research papers on all aspects of the ecology of plants (including algae), in both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. We are happy to consider studies of plant communities, populations or individual species, and studies of the interactions between plants and organisms such as animals, fungi or bacteria, providing that the focus is towards the ecology of the plants. Experimental papers may use any ecological approach, including molecular and more traditional techniques. Theoretical papers are welcome, as are descriptive or historical accounts that offer insights into issues of general interest to ecologists, but reports concerned solely with cultivated plants and agricultural ecosystems are not.

Papers should have a broad interest, and submission of reports that break new ground or advance our understanding of ecological principles is particularly welcomed. Standard papers may therefore be short (providing the topic is important and timely) or present more detailed accounts (although these should only exceed 12pp in exceptional circumstances). We also accept short Essay Reviews, intended to promote discussion of a topical area (rather than exhaustive surveys of the literature) and Forum articles (opinions or responses to material published in the Journal or other short articles without data).

Our aim is that the content of the Journal will reflect the changing emphasis in our subject area and we therefore urge authors to consider submitting their best and most current work to us. We are particularly interested in receiving proposals for Essay Reviews and Forum articles, but suggest that intending authors of such contributions should send an outline of the content to the Executive Editor before preparing a detailed draft.  Most issues also carry a description of at least one species in our ongoing account of the Biological Flora of the British Isles. Over 200 accounts have already been published; from 1998 onwards these are available electronically and can be accessed free of  charge, either via Synergy or from the index page .

Please note that Journal of Ecology no longer publishes Appendices in the printed version, but supplementary material may be published in electronic form. A catalogue of entries (with direct links) is available. This enables any interested reader to view all such material (including that formerly described as the Journal of Ecology Archive) free of charge. Appendices can also be accessed  via the appropriate Table of Contents or using the URL given in the printed version.

Improved turnround times and access
We are pleased to have recorded  significant reductions in handling times since the introduction of web-based submission and review: mean times to first decision have fallen from 12 weeks in 2002 to 7 weeks this year, and time from then to acceptance has been cut to 10 weeks. Combined with further streamlining of production, we anticipate that accepted papers will soon be published, on average, 7 or 8 months after initial receipt, compared with 13 months only two years ago.

 


Instructions to Authors

Online submission and review of manuscripts is now mandatory for all types of paper. Please prepare your manuscript following the instructions for authors given below before submitting it online at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jecol-besjournals. If submission is completed successfully, a manuscript ID will appear on screen, and an e-mail acknowledgement will follow.
All subsequent correspondence should be sent to the Managing Editor, Andrea Baier, at managingeditor@journalofecology.org.

Publication Policy
Journal of Ecology appears six times a year and publishes original research papers on all aspects of the ecology of plants (including algae), in both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. We do not publish papers concerned solely with cultivated plants and agricultural ecosystems. Studies of plant communities, populations or individual species are accepted, as well as studies of the interactions between plants and animals, fungi or bacteria, providing they focus on the ecology of the plants.
We aim to bring important work using any ecological approach (including molecular techniques) to a wide international audience and therefore only publish papers with strong and ecological messages that advance our understanding of ecological principles. The research presented must transcend the limits of case studies. Both experimental and theoretical studies are accepted, as are descriptive or historical accounts, although these must offer insights into issues of general interest to ecologists.
Papers should have a broad interest, and submission of reports that break new ground or advance our understanding of ecological principles is particularly welcomed.
We aim for the content of the Journal to reflect the changing emphasis in our subject area and therefore urge authors to consider submitting their best and most current work to us.

All submissions will be assessed by one or more editors to determine whether they fall within the broad remit of Journal of Ecology and meet the above-mentioned requirements. Papers that do not fulfil these criteria are likely to be rejected without review. This reduces the burden on both the refereeing community and the editorial system and enables authors to submit, without delay, to another journal. After this initial screening, all types of papers are subject to peer review and authors can expect a decision, or an explanation for the delay, within three months of receipt. If a revision is requested, the correspondence author should submit the revised manuscript within twp months. Otherwise, revisions may be treated as new submissions and sent for further evaluation by new referees, unless there are special reasons for prolonged delay agreed, in advance, with the editor.

There is no charge for publishing papers unless authors choose the open access option 'OnlineOpen' (see 'Accepted Manuscripts' below).
All papers accepted remain copyright of the authors, but an Exclusive Licence to Publish must be granted to the British Ecological Society.

Types of Papers Published

  • Standard Papers - report practical or theoretical ecological research and typically comprise up to 12 typeset pages. Longer articles are also considered, provided the content justifies the extent.
  • Essay Reviews - intended to promote discussion of a topical area (rather than offering exhaustive surveys of the literature)
  • Forum Papers - short articles presenting new ideas (without data), opinions or responses to material published in Journal of Ecology designed to stimulate scientific debate.
  • Future Directions - short articles that outline a provocative new direction for a discipline within plant ecology and intend to challenge currently accepted views
  • Biological Flora of the British Isles - autecological accounts of plant species native to the British Isles. All offers of new contributions should in the first instance be discussed with the Biological Flora Editor.

The Editors are happy to discuss topics for Essay Reviews, Forum Papers and Future direction articles with authors before submission. All inquiries should be sent to the Managing Editor in the first instance.

Research and Publication Ethics
Researchers must have proper regard for conservation and animal welfare considerations. Although concerning only a minority of papers submitted to Journal of Ecology, attention is drawn to the 'Guidelines for the Use of Animals in Research' published in each January issue of the journal Animal Behaviour since 1991. Any possible adverse consequences of the work for populations or individual organisms must be weighed against the possible gains in knowledge and its practical applications. During submission, authors will be required to sign a declaration that their work conforms to the legal requirements of the country in which it was carried out (see below), but editors may seek advice from referees on ethical matters and the final decision will rest with the editors.
Since October 2008, Journal of Ecology has been member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and Editors address all instances of plagiarism, false authorship and unethical publishing behaviour following COPE guidelines.

Manuscript Submission
Please follow these instructions carefully when preparing  your manuscript to ensure that your submission is dealt with speedily.
Journal of Ecology uses a fully web-based system for manuscript submission and peer review and authors must submit their manuscripts online. Full instructions (and a helpline) are accessible from the 'Get Help Now' icon on the online submission site at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jecol-besjournals. Persistent problems should, however, be reported to the Managing Editor.

During online submission authors will be required to agree to the Author's Declaration confirming that:

  • the work as submitted has not been published or accepted for publication, nor is being considered for publication elsewhere, either in whole or substantial part.
  • the work is original and all necessary acknowledgements have been made.
  • all authors and relevant institutions have read the submitted version of the manuscript and approve its submission.
  • all persons entitled to authorship have been so included.
  • the work conforms to the legal requirements of the country in which it was carried out, including those relating to conservation and welfare, and to the journal's policy on these matters.


Manuscript Structure
Submitted manuscripts must be double spaced with sequential line numbers throughout the entire document. Pages should be numbered consecutively, including those containing acknowledgements, references, tables and figures.

Standard Papers. Standard papers should not normally be longer than 12 printed pages (a page of printed text, without figures or tables carries c. 800 words). The typescript should be arranged as follows, with each section starting on a separate page.

Title page. This should contain:

  • a concise and informative title (as short as possible). Do not include the authorities for taxonomic names in the title.
  • a list of authors' names with names and full addresses of institutions. Author first names should be provided in full.
  • the name of the correspondence author, indicated using an asterisk, to whom decisions and, if appropriate, proofs will be sent. Email address, fax number and current address, if different from above, should be provided.
  • a running headline of not more than 45 characters.

Summary. This is called the Abstract on the web submission site. The Summary must not exceed 350 words and should list the main results and conclusions, using simple, factual, numbered statements. The final point of your Summary must be headed 'Synthesis', and must emphasize the key findings of the work and its general significance, indicating clearly how this study has advanced ecological understanding. This policy is intended to maximize the impact of your paper, by making it of as wide interest as possible. This final point should therefore explain the importance of your paper in a way that is accessible to non-specialists. We emphasize that the Journal is more likely to accept manuscripts that address important and topical questions and hypotheses, and deliver generic rather than specific messages.

Key-words. A list in alphabetical order not exceeding ten words or short phrases, excluding words used in the title.

Introduction. Explain the reasons for carrying out the work, outline the essential background and clearly state the nature of the hypothesis or hypotheses under consideration.

Materials and methods. Provide sufficient details of the techniques employed to enable the work to be repeated. Do not describe or refer to commonplace statistical tests in this section but allude to them briefly in Results.

Results. State the results and draw attention in the text to important details shown in tables and figures.

Discussion. Point out the significance of the results in relation to the reasons for doing the work, and place them in the context of other work.

Acknowledgements. If authors refer to themselves as recipients of assistance or funding, they should do so by their initials separated by points (e.g. J.B.T.). Do not acknowledge Editors by name.

References (see Specifications).

Tables (see Specifications). Each table should be on a separate page, numbered and accompanied by a legend at the top. They should be referred to in the text as Table 1, etc. Do not present the same data in both figure and table form or repeat large numbers of values from Tables in the text.

Figures (see Specifications). Figures and their legends should be grouped together at the end of the paper, before the appendices (if present). If figures have been supplied as a list at the end of the text file (as recommended), they should appear above their respective legend. The word figures should be abbreviated in the text (e.g. Fig. 1; Figs. 2 and 3), except when starting a sentence. Photographic illustrations should also be referred to as Figures.

Appendices / Supporting information. Please note that Journal of Ecology no longer publishes Appendices in the printed version, but supporting information may be published in electronic form. Instructions for the preparation of supporting information are available here and general instructions on supporting information can be found here.
In order to promote the advancement of science through the process of documenting and making available the research information and supporting data behind published studies, the editors of this journal strongly encourage authors to make arrangements for archiving their underlying data.

Essay Reviews, Forum Papers and Future Directions articles. Format and specifications are as for Standard Papers except that any Summary section should be short (no more than 200 words) and the division into Introduction, Materials and methods, Results and Discussion is unlikely to be appropriate. Please see recent editions of the journal for examples.

Biological Flora of the British Isles. These accounts have their own format (see a recent issue). All offers of new contributions should be addressed to the Biological Flora Editor.
 

Manuscript specifications
Manuscripts for review must consist of no more than two files and should, ideally, be a single word processor file (NOT a PDF, not a LaTeX file) with figures and tables added at the end of the text. This file will be converted to a PDF upon upload. Referees will be given access to the PDF version although the word processor file will remain accessible by the Managing Editor. Authors must therefore open each of the PDF files to check that the conversion has not introduced any errors. Papers must reach certain standards before referees are asked to consider them: submissions that are not in the correct format, or which cannot be downloaded and printed reliably may therefore be returned to authors without review. Authors should retain their electronic manuscript file in case of any difficulties arising during online submission.

Pre-submission English-language editing. Authors for whom English is a second language may wish to consider having their manuscript professionally edited before submission to improve the English. A list of independent suppliers of editing services can be found at here. All services are paid for and arranged by the author, and use of one of these services does not guarantee acceptance or preference for publication.

Language. Journal of Ecology only publishes papers in English and spelling should conform to the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English. Journal style is not to use the serial comma (also known as the Oxford or Harvard comma) before and/or/nor unless meaning would otherwise be obscured. Editors reserve the right to modify accepted manuscripts that do not conform to scientific, technical, stylistic or grammatical standards, and minor alterations of this nature may not be seen by authors until the proof stage.

Units, symbols and abbreviations. Authors are requested to use the International System of Units (SI, Système International d'Unités) 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. Journal style for time units are: s, min, h, days, weeks, months, years.
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. Subsequently, the genus name may be abbreviated, except at the beginning of a sentence. 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).

Manufacturers' names. When a special piece of equipment has been used it should be described so that the reader can trace its specifications by contacting the manufacturer; thus: 'Data were collected using a solid-state data logger (CR21X, Campbell Scientific, Utah, USA)'.

Mathematical material. Where ever possible, mathematical equations and symbols should be typed in-line by keyboard entry (using Symbol font for Greek characters, and superscript and subscript options where applicable). Do not embed equations or symbols using Equation Editor or Math Type, or equivalents, when simple in-line, keyboard entry is possible. Equation software should be used only for displayed, multi-line equations and equations and symbols that can not be typed. Suffixes and operators such as d, log, ln and exp will be set in Roman type; matrices and vectors in bold type; other algebraic symbols in italics; and Greek symbols in upright type. Make sure that there is no confusion between similar characters like l ('ell') and 1 ('one'). If there are several equations they should be identified by an equation number (e.g. 'eqn 1' after the equation, and cited in the text as 'equation 1').

Number conventions. Text: Numbers from one to nine should be spelled out except when used with units; e.g. two eyes but 10 stomata; 3 years and 5 kg. Tables: Do not use an excessive number of digits when writing a decimal number to represent the mean of a set of measurements (the number of digits should reflect the precision of the measurement).

Figures (including photographs). Please note that your paper will be published more quickly if instructions on figure content and figure format are followed carefully. Vector graphic figures will give the best possible online publication quality.
All illustrations are classified as figures and should be numbered consecutively (Fig. 1, Fig. 2, etc.) and placed in a list at the end of the document. Figures should be cited in the text as, e.g., Fig. 1, Fig. 1a,b, Figs 1 and 2 (no period after Figs), or, if starting a sentence, Figure 1. Each figure must have a legend, presented separately from the figure. The legend should give enough detail so that the figure can be understood without reference to the text. Information (e.g. keys) that appears on the figure itself should not be duplicated in the legend. The figure legend label should be abbreviated, in bold, and end in a period (e.g. Fig. 1.). The figure legend text should end in a full stop.
Please ensure that artwork is prepared to fit across one or two columns or two-thirds width (71 mm, 149 mm or 109 mm, respectively). Wherever possible, figures should be sized to fit into a single column width. To make best use of space, you may need to rearrange parts of figures (e.g. so that they appear side by side). If figures are prepared that will require reduction, please ensure that symbols, labels, axes text, etc., are large enough to allow reduction to a final size of about 8 point, i.e. capital letters will be about 2 mm tall. Lettering should use a sans serif font (e.g. Helvetica or Arial) with capitals used for the initial letter of the first word only. Bold lettering should not be used within the figure. Units of axes should appear in parentheses after the axis name, as required. All lettering and symbols must be proportioned, clear and easy to read, i.e. no labels should be too large or too small. Figures should not be boxed (superfluous bounding axes) and tick marks must be on the inside of the axes if possible. Label multi-panel figures (a), (b), (c), etc., preferably in the upper left corner. Use greyscales (e.g. 0, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100%) in preference to pattern fills where possible. If colour figures are submitted for colour online publication only, ensure that after conversion to greyscale they remain entirely intelligible for the black-and-white print publication of your paper.
Colour figures (including photographs) must be accompanied by the Colour Work Agreement Form. The cost for colour printing must be met by the author (currently £150 for the first figure, £50 thereafter, exclusive of VAT). If no funds are available to cover colour printing costs, the journal offers free colour reproduction online (with black-and-white reproduction in print). If authors require this, they should write their figure legend to accommodate both versions of the figure within the same legend, and indicate their colour requirements on the Colour Work Agreement Form. This form should be completed in all instances where authors require colour, whether in print or online. Therefore, at acceptance, please download the form and return it to: Production Editor, Journal of Ecology, Wiley-Blackwell , 101 George Street, Edinburgh EH2 3ES, UK; fax +44 131 226 3803, e-mail jec@oxon.blackwellpublishing.com). Please note that if you require colour content your paper cannot be published until this form is received.

File formats. At the time of submission, or after acceptance of the manuscript for publication, figure files should be supplied as follows. Photographic figures should be saved in tif format at 300 d.p.i. (or failing that in jpg format with low compression). Line figures should be saved as vector graphics (i.e. composed of lines, curves, points and fonts; not pixels) in pdf, eps, ai, svg or wmf format, or embedded as such in Word, as this enhances their display when published online. Combination figures (those composed of vector and pixel/raster elements) should also be saved in pdf, eps, ai, svg or wmf format where possible (or embedded as such in Word). If line figures and combination figures cannot be saved in vector graphics format, they should be saved in tif format at high resolution (i.e. 600 d.p.i.) (do not save them in jpg format as this will cause blurring). If you are unsure about the quality of your figures, please inspect a small portion by zooming in to check that fonts, curves and diagonal lines are smooth-edged and do not appear unduly blocky or burred when viewed at high magnification. Note that line and combination figures supplied in tif format are downsampled for online publication, authors should therefore preferentially opt for vector graphic formats for these figure types (note, however, that for pint publication full resolution files will be used). For full instructions on preparing your figures please refer to our Electronic Artwork Information for Authors page.

Tables and table captions. Tables should be constructed using 'tabs' (not spaces or software options). Units should appear in parentheses after the column or row name, e.g. Time (weeks). Tables should be cited in the text as, e.g., Table 1, Table 1a,b, Tables 1 and 2. The table caption label should not be abbreviated, and must be in bold and end with period (e.g. Table 1.). The table caption must appear above the table and must NOT end in a full stop. Table footnotes should be indicated using symbols *, †, ‡, ¶, § (not superscripted); these should be doubled-up if more than 5 are needed (**, ††, ‡‡, ¶¶, §§), or if more than 10 are needed use superscript letters a, b, c, etc., throughout.

Citations and references. Citation to work by four or more authors in the text should be abbreviated with the use of et al. (e.g. Able et al. 1997). Work with the same first author and date should be coded by letters, e.g. Thompson et al. 1991a,b. Citations should be listed in chronological order in the text and separated by a semi-colon, e.g. Zimmerman et al. 1986; Able et al. 1997.
We recommend the use of a tool such as EndNote or Reference Manager for reference management and formatting. EndNote reference styles can be searched for here: http://www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp; Reference Manager reference styles can be searched for here: http://www.refman.com/support/rmstyles.asp. The references in the Reference list should be in alphabetical order with the journal name unabbreviated. The format for papers, entire books and chapters in books is as follows:

  • Boutin, C. & Harper, J.L. (1991) A comparative study of the population dynamics of five species of Veronica in natural habitats. Journal of Ecology, 79, 199-221.
  • Clarke, N.A. (1983) The ecology of dunlin (Calidris alpina L.) wintering on the Severn estuary. PhD thesis, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh.
  • Pimm, S.L. (1982) Food Webs. Chapman and Hall, London.
  • Sibly, R.M. (1981) Strategies of digestion and defecation. Physiological Ecology (eds C. R. Townsend & P. Calow), pp. 109-139. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford.

References should only be cited as 'in press' if the paper has been accepted for publication. Reference to unpublished works, works in preparation or works under review should cited as 'unpublished data', with the author's initials and surname given; such works should not be included in the Reference section. Any paper cited as 'in press' or under review elsewhere must be uploaded with the author's manuscript as a 'supplementary file not for review' so that it can be seen by the editors and, if necessary, made available to the referees.

Exclusive Licence Form
Authors will be required to sign an Exclusive Licence Form (ELF) for all papers accepted for publication. This form is available here or can be downloaded via the 'Instructions and forms' icon located on the ScholarOne Manuscripts website. Please read carefully before signing: conditions are changed from time to time and may not be the same as the last time you completed one of these forms. Signature of the ELF is a condition of publication, and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless a signed form has been received. Please note that signature of the Exclusive Licence Form does not affect ownership of copyright in the material. After submission, authors will retain the right to publish their paper in various media/circumstances (please see the form for further details).

Accepted Manuscripts
OnlineOpen is available to authors of primary research articles who wish to make their article available to non-subscribers on publication, or whose funding agency requires grantees to archive the final version of their article. With OnlineOpen, the author, the author's funding agency, or the author's institution pays a fee to ensure that the article is made available to non-subscribers upon publication via Wiley InterScience, as well as deposited in the funding agency's preferred archive. For the full list of terms and conditions, click here.

Any authors wishing to send their paper OnlineOpen will be required to complete the payment form.

Prior to acceptance there is no requirement to inform an Editorial Office that you intend to publish your paper OnlineOpen if you do not wish to. All OnlineOpen articles are treated in the same way as any other article. They go through the journal's standard peer-review process and will be accepted or rejected based on their own merit.
 
Tracking of Accepted Manuscripts.
Online production tracking is now available for your article through Wiley-Blackwell's Author Services. Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Authors can check the status of their articles online and choose to receive automated e-mails at key stages of production. Authors will receive an e-mail with a unique link that enables them to register and have their article automatically added to the system. Please ensure that a complete e-mail address is provided when submitting the manuscript. Visit the Author Services page for more details on online production tracking and for a wealth of resources including FAQs and tips on article preparation, submission and more.

Proofs. The corresponding author will receive an e-mail alert containing a link to a web site from where a PDF file of the proof can be downloaded. A reliable e-mail address must therefore be provided for the corresponding author. Acrobat Reader will be required in order to read this PDF file. This software, which can be downloaded free of charge from http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html, will enable the file to be opened, read on screen and printed out in order for any corrections to be added. Further instructions will be sent with the proof. Authors whose e-mail connection is unreliable, or who are likely to be out of contact and cannot have their e-mail checked regularly, should nominate an alternative person to receive and correct the proofs; they should do this when submitting their final typescript. The editors reserve the right to correct the proofs themselves, using the accepted version of the typescript, if the author's corrections are overdue and journal publication would otherwise be delayed. Hardcopy proofs will be posted if no e-mail address is available. Excessive alterations in the text, other than printer's errors, may be charged to the author.
Please return your marked-up proofs to the Production Editor, within 3 days of receipt. If this is not possible, or if you have no corrections, please advise the Production Editor by e-mail. Proofs should be returned by 1st class mail if in the UK, by airmail if in Europe, or by courier/special delivery if further afield. Alternatively, please scan your proof corrections (200 d.p.i.) and return as an e-mail attachment; if the file is greater than 3 Mb please send a second e-mail asking for confirmation of receipt. Due to loss of clarity when documents are faxed and increased handling time if corrections are sent only as a list, we request that under normal circumstances hardcopy or a scan of the same is returned in all instances. Send corrections to: Production Editor, Journal of Ecology, Wiley-Blackwell, 101 George Street, Edinburgh EH2 3ES, UK, e-mail: jec@oxon.blackwellpublishing.com. If you registered with Author Services when you submitted your paper you will receive an e-mail within 48-hours to confirm that your proof corrections have been received.

EarlyView. Journal of Ecology is covered by Wiley-Blackwell’s EarlyView service. EarlyView 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 and are not held until publication of the next scheduled print issue. To register to receive an e-mail alert when your EarlyView article is published, click here and log-in to Wiley InterScience. EarlyView articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and the author's final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in their final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of EarlyView articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so EarlyView 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. More information about DOIs can be found at http://www.doi.org/faq.html.

Offprints. The corresponding author will receive a PDF offprint of their article free of charge at the time of publication within an issue of the journal (i.e. once the article is paginated). Printed offprints may be ordered using the Offprint Order Form supplied with the proofs (see form for charges), provided that the form is returned promptly (i.e. at the time of proof correction). Order forms should be returned to C.O.S. Printers Pte Ltd, 9 Kian Teck Crescent, Singapore 628875; Fax: +65 6265 9074; E-mail: offprint@cosprinterscom. Printed Offprints are normally dispatched by surface mail within 3 weeks of publication of the issue in which the paper appears. Please contact the publishers if offprints do not arrive: however, please note that offprints are sent by surface mail, so overseas orders may take up to 6 weeks to arrive. The PDF offprint is e-mailed to the first author at his or her first e-mail address on the title page of the paper, unless advised otherwise; therefore please ensure that the name, address and e-mail of the receiving author are clearly indicated on the manuscript title page if he or she is not the first author of the paper. A copy of the Publisher's Terms and Conditions for the use of the PDF file will accompany the PDF offprint and the file can only be distributed in accordance with these requirements. Authors can also nominate up to three colleagues whom they would like to receive a complimentary PDF offprint.

Author material archive policy. Please note that unless specifically requested, Wiley-Blackwell will dispose of all hardcopy or electronic material submitted 2 months after publication. If you require the return of any material submitted, please inform the editorial office or production editor when your paper is accepted for publication.

Journal Menu

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Editorial Board

Editors
Anthony J. Davy, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
e-mail: a.davy@uea.ac.uk

Michael J. Hutchings, University of Sussex, Brighton,UK

David J. Gibson, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, US

Managing Editor (and Editorial office)
Lindsay Haddon
British Ecological Society
26 Blades Court
Deodar Road
Putney
London, SW15 2NU
UK

Tel: +44 208 871 9797
Fax: +44 208 871 9779
e-mail: Lindsay@BritishEcologicalSociety.org

Editorial Board
P. Adam, University of New South Wales, Australia
P. Alpert, University of Massachusetts, USA
S. C. H. Barrett, University of Toronto, Canada
D. Burslem, University of Aberdeen, UK
T. Hara, Hokkaido University, Japan
S. Hartley, University of Sussex, UK
R.L. Jefferies, University of Toronto, Canada
P. Klinkhamer, Leiden State University, The Netherlands
H. de Kroon, University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands
W.K. Lauenroth, Colorado State University, USA
S.J Lavorel, Universit?Joseph Fourier, France
J.A. Lee, University of Sheffield, UK
P. Moore, Kings College London, UK
N.J. Ouborg, Nijmegen Unviversity, The Netherlands
C. Peterson, University of Georgia, USA
H. Prentice, Lund University, Sweden
M.C. Press, University of Sheffield, UK
I. Sanders, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
B. Schmid, University of Zurich, Switzerland
K. Thompson, University of Sheffield, UK
R. Turkington, University of British Columbia, Canada
J. Weiner, Royal Veterinary & Agricultural Univiversity, Denmark
M. Williamson, University of York, UK
S.J. Wright, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, USA



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