图书馆主页
数据库简介
最新动态
联系我们



返回首页


 刊名字顺( Alphabetical List of Journals):

  A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z|ALL


  检 索:         高级检索

期刊名称:PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE

ISSN:1526-498X
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD, THE ATRIUM, SOUTHERN GATE, CHICHESTER, ENGLAND, W SUSSEX, PO19 8SQ
  出版社网址:http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/
期刊网址:http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/68504529
影响因子:4.845
主题范畴:AGRONOMY;    ENTOMOLOGY

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



About the journal

Cover image for Vol. 66 Issue 9

   Pest Management Science

      See Also: Pesticide Science


      Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry

Pest Management Science (formerly Pesticide Science) is an international journal of research and technology on crop protection and pest control. Since its launch in 1970, the journal has become the premier forum for papers covering all aspects of research and development, application, use and impact on the environment of products designed for pest control and crop protection.

Topics covered by the journal include:

  • Applications for biotechnology and molecular biology relevant to crop, animal and public health
  • Biological control, biopesticides and integrated crop management (ICM)
  • Synthesis, screening, structure/activity and biochemical mode of action studies of compounds
  • Physicochemical properties of new compounds; mathematical modelling and formulation studies, and application systems and their performance
  • Metabolism, degradation, field performance, environmental studies and safety in use of new and existing products
  • Synthetic and naturally occurring insecticides, herbicides, fungicides and growth regulators for agricultural, veterinary and public health uses
  • Ecological implications of pesticide applications alone and with other methods of pest, weed and disease control
  • Protection of commodities
  • Toxicology, risk assessment and regulation

The journal may publish papers from scientific meetings of relevant SCI specialist groups (SCI Crop Protection Group and SCI BioActive Sciences Group) and from other selected international conferences and also lists of recently adopted BSI common names for pesticides.

Abstracting and Indexing Services


  • ADONIS
  • AGRICOLA database
  • Biological & Agricultural Index (H W Wilson)
  • Biological Abstracts (BIOSIS)
  • BIOSIS Previews
  • British Technology Index
  • CAB Abstracts
  • Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
  • Chemical Abstracts Service
  • Current Contents/Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (ISI)
  • Elsevier BIOBASE/Current Awareness in Biological Sciences
  • Environment Abstracts (CIS)
  • Environmental Periodicals Bibliography
  • Geobase (Elsevier)
  • ISI Alerting Services
  • Pesticide Outlook (RSC)
  • Reaction Citation Index (ISI)
  • Research Trends in Pest Management
  • Science Citation Index Expanded (also known as SciSearch) (ISI)
  • Science Citation Index (ISI)

Instructions to Authors
1 GENERAL

Papers and correspondence should be sent to:

The Journals Manager,
Pest Management Science,
SCI, 14/15 Belgrave Square,
London SW1X 8PS, UK
T: +44 (0)20 7598 1551
F: +44 (0)20 7235 0887
E: pestmansci@soci.org

Papers from North America should be sent to:

Dr RD Wauchope,
USDA-ARS,
University of Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station,
PO Box 748, Tifton,
GA 31793, USA
T: +1 229 386 3892
F: +1 229 386 7215
E: don@tifton.cpes.peachnet.edu

Authors will receive an immediate acknowledgement of receipt of their paper followed, normally within three months, by notification of acceptance or rejection. Inadequately or incorrectly prepared typescripts may be delayed or even rejected. Authors should refer to a recent copy of the Journal for its style and practices when preparing a manuscript and follow the instructions given below. The corresponding author must obtain the consent of all the co-authors to the submission of the paper. Papers may not be offered for publication elsewhere while under consideration by Pest Management Science. Manuscripts must be in clear, concise English.

Authors in Japan: If you require assistance, Wiley-Japan can provide a list of recommended services to check and improve the English in papers before submission. Please contact Masayo Kobayashi in the Wiley-Japan office by fax (+81 (0)3 3556 9763) or e-mail (editorial@wiley.co.jp) for more information, stating which SCI/Wiley journal you wish to submit to.

2 LAYOUT OF PAPERS

Layout will depend on the content but that below is suitable for most research papers.

Title This should be concise, reasonably specific and explain the nature of the paper. In general, use scientific names for specific pests, pathogens, weeds and so on. State in a footnote if the paper was given, in whole or part, at a scientific meeting. If the paper is a part of a series, the full reference of the previous part should be given in a footnote on the title page.

Authors' names These must each have one forename in full and initials (for example, Arthur B Smith). Give the address where the work was done, and the name, address, phone and fax numbers (and e-mail address where available) of the corresponding author to whom correspondence and proofs are to be sent.

Abstract This should draw attention to the salient points and be intelligible by itself.

Key words Appropriate key words (4-6) should be provided for indexing, abstracting and online searching.

Headings Sections should be numbered thus: 1 FOR MAIN HEADINGS; 1.1 For headings; 1.1.1 For sub-headings.

Introduction Give the aim of the investigations and a brief statement of previous relevant work with references. A trade mark of a pesticide may be mentioned once in the paper, either in the Introduction or the Experimental section, otherwise use the ISO common name or full chemical name (see Section 3h below).

Experimental methods State clearly, in sufficient detail to permit the work to be repeated, the methods and materials used. Only new techniques need to be described in detail but known methods must have adequate references. State the type and strength of formulations (give the manufacturer's name and address in parentheses in the text). Express quantities thus: 'The foliage (25 g) was blended with acetone (60 ml) for 5 min, the mixture filtered, water (200 ml) added to the filtrate, and the liquid extracted with dichloro-methane (4?0 ml)'. Express mixed solvents thus: hexane+acetone (4+1 by volume). State the number of replicates used for bioassays, and the life-stage, sex, weight and age (if possible) of pests.

Results Present these concisely, using tables or illustrations for clarity; do not list the results again in the text. Give adequate indication of the level of experimental error and the statistical significance of the results. Do not overestimate the precision of your measurements. Papers on residue analysis must state the efficiency of recovery. Only in exceptional circumstances will both tables and illustrations based on them be accepted. Give residue levels in mg kg-1 and not ppm. Include analytical and spectroscopic data only if they give essential evidence on the structure of compounds and use tables whenever possible (see also Section 4). It is permissible to combine the Experimental Methods and Results sections when appropriate to do so.

Discussion Usually the Results should be followed by a concise section to discuss and interpret them. A combined Results and Discussion section sometimes simplifies the presentation.

Conclusions Do not merely repeat preceding sections. The Discussion and Conclusions sections may be merged.

Acknowledgements Keep these to the absolute minimum.

References Check these carefully for accuracy and follow the correct style (see Section 3f below).

3 MANUSCRIPTS

(a) Typing Type in double spacing on one side of the paper, using at least a 10 cpi or 12 point font and leaving adequate margins. Each page should be numbered individually. Text lines should be numbered, with the numbers restarting on each page. If necessary, manually numbering lines 5, 10, ... (etc) in the left margin using a pen is acceptable. Underline no part of the text or headings unless it is absolutely necessary, i.e., for emphasis, genera and species names, some chemical descriptors and journal titles. Do not underline headings. Send the top copy and three others (photocopies are adequate) to the appropriate Editor (see item 1). At a later stage an electronic version (MS Word 7 or lower) of the final revised paper will be requested and if made available will expedite processing.

(b) Tables Number tables consecutively using arabic numerals and supply each table on a separate sheet. Keep the number of columns as few as possible and the titles of the tables concise. Units should appear in parentheses in the column heading and not in the body of the table. Give essential details as footnotes, each identfied by an alphabetical superscript (eg a Minimum inhibitory concentration). The results must be easy to follow without horizontal lines between entries.

(c) Chemical structures Number these with bold arabic numerals (1, 2) and submit them as figures (see Section d). Use CH3 , C2H5 etc, rather than Me, Et. Aromatic and unsaturated heterocyclic systems are shown by the presence of double bonds. Preferably use general structures, distinguishing related compounds by substitutions R1, R2, etc.

(d) Illustrations Include only if essential, and number line drawings, figures and photographs in a single sequence in order of appearance using arabic numerals. Keep lettering and numbering (characters) on illustrations to a minimum and include essential details in the legend. Write the authors' names and the title of the paper on the back of each illustration using soft pencil. Where any confusion is possible, identify the top of the illustration clearly. Photomicrographs must have a scale bar. All legends should be combined in one list and typed on a separate sheet.

Where possible, illustrations should also be submitted in electronic format. Save each figure as a separate file, in .eps, .ps, .pdf or .tif format preferably, and include the source file. Write on the disk the software package used to create the files. Use dedicated illustration packages in preference to tools such as Excel or Powerpoint. Where an author has used formats other than those preferred, the format should be saved by the author to one of the preferred formats before submission of the paper.

Line drawings and figures should be in a form suitable for direct reproduction, no larger than A4 or 8.5" ?11", supplied either as original drawings, in black ink, with stencilled lettering, on plain white paper, or as high quality laser or ink jet prints. Dry transfer, typewritten or handwritten lettering is not acceptable. Computer-drawn diagrams must be prepared on a high quality laser or ink jet printer or plotter, not on a dot matrix printer or equivalent. Do not use shades of grey, but hatching may be used, to distinguish bar graphs and other coded areas.

Use only essential characters and insert these and any other symbols clearly; explain all symbols used, and, where a key to symbols is required, please include this in the artwork itself, not in the figure legend. On graphs, include labels and units on axes. Units should be in the same form as used in the text (see section e, below). Data points should carry error bars where appropriate. Present logarithmic scales with arithmetic numbering 0.1, 1, 10, 100 rather than -1, 0, 1, 2. Avoid unnecessarily long axes that lead to large blank spaces on graphs.

Line drawings and figures should all require the same degree of reduction and all characters must be chosen so that after reduction they are at least 1.5 mm in height. The type area of the journal is 172 mm wide?40 mm deep, in two columns each 81 mm wide, and the characters should therefore be large enough to be legible after reduction of the illustrations to fit the page or column width.

Photographs (halftones) should be glossy prints of good contrast. Photocopies are not acceptable. Do not allow them to be damaged by paper clips, folding, etc. Some loss of clarity will inevitably occur during reproduction.

Authors should note that printing figures in colour will incur a charge. Details are available from the Editorial office.(pestmansci@soci.org).

(e) Symbols, formulae and equations Write these with great care using SI units and symbols where possible (see British Standards Publication PD 5686, 1972; part 1 of BS 1991: 1976). Common units include: concentration g m-3, mg litre-1 (not ppm, nor g/cu m, not % w/w nor % w/v); molarity M (not normality); pressure as Pa or mmHg (not psi, nor Torr).

( f ) References Refer to unpublished work entirely in the text thus: (Smith, AB, unpublished) (Brown, CD, 1987, pers comm.). Indicate literature references by numerical superscripts1 in order of appearance2,3 after any punctuation.4-6 Each number should refer to only one reference. List the references in numerical order at the end of the paper, giving all the authors with their initials after the respective surname(s). Include paper titles and chapter titles in references. Abbreviate the journal title as in Chemical Abstracts (see detailed list in Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index 1978, cumulative; and quarterly supplements; if the journal is not included, give the title in full). Note carefully the style and order:

  1. Hadfield ST, Sadler JK, Bolygo E, Hill S and Hill IR, Pyrethroid residues in sediment and water samples from mesocosm and farm pond studies of simulated accidental aquatic exposure. Pestic Sci 38:283-294 (1993).

The journal title should be in italic and the volume number in bold. Give first and last page numbers of the reference but no part number unless there is separate pagination for each issue.

Quote books as follows, taking care to include the publisher's name and the place and date of publication:

  1. de Waard MA, Fungal resistance strategies in winter wheat in the Netherlands, in Resistance '91: Achievements and Developments in Combating Pesticide Resistance, ed by Denholm I, Devonshire AL and Hollomon DW, Elsevier Science Publishers, London, pp 48-60 (1992).

When quoting conference proceedings, include the organisers of the conference and also the publishers of the proceedings (if different from the organisers) and the date and place of publication.

When quoting patents give the name of the applicant, title of patent, the country, patent number (or application number) and year of publication, thus:

  1. Cidaria D, Andriollo N, Cassani G, Crestani E, Spera S, Garavaglia C, Pirali G and Confalonieri G, AB021 antibiotics and process for producing them. US Patent 5 126 265 (1992).

(g) Footnotes Keep footnotes in the text to a minimum and indicate them by asterisks and daggers (* ?.

(h) Nomenclature of pesticides and chemicals Use the ISO common names of pesticides (or the BSI, or ANSI name if no ISO name is available; see The Pesticide Manual, ed by Tomlin C, British Crop Protection Council, Farnham, twelfth edition, 2000); if there is a common name give the chemical name only if necessary for clarity. If there is no BSI common name use the compound's code number, giving the full chemical name (IUPAC nomenclature) at the first mention in the text; all names to be published in IUPAC form. Take care with chemical prefixes, for example o-, O,O-, N,N-, S-, (R)-, (Z)-, (E)-, sec-, tert- (underline for italic), and with hyphens, numbers, punctuation and spacing, all of which are critical.

Certain other officially approved common names for medicinal and veterinary products are also permitted, including British Pharmacopoeia Commision Approved Names (BAN) and Recommended International Non-proprietary Names (rINN).

(i) Scientific names of pests, species, etc. Give the scientific names (with authority, abbreviated as is customary) of test plants or organisms, eg scots pine, Pinus sylvestris L, pests, disease pathogens and host species in full at the first mention in the abstract and in the main text, eg Myzus persicae (Sulzer). Thereafter abbreviate the scientific name in the text (M persicae), or, if appropriate, use the common name, eg wheat. Give scientific names in full (without authority) in the title, the headings of sections, tables and figures. Underline genera and species names.

( j ) Avoid the use of unqualified emotive terms such as 'toxic' when describing biological activity; they should be replaced with 'active', 'fungitoxic', 'phytotoxic', 'insecticidal', 'insect toxic', etc, reflecting accurately the context of use. Similarly, be careful to differentiate between 'rate' (eg g ha-1) and 'dose' (eg g litre-1) and to use units applicable to the term used.

Permission Grants

If the manuscript contains extracts, including illustrations, from other copyright works (including material from on-line or intranet sources) it is the authors responsibility to obtain written permission from the owners of the publishing rights to reproduce such extracts, using the Wiley Permission Request Form. Permission forms should be submitted with the manuscript.

4 CRITICAL REVIEWS

Authors wishing to submit a critical review should first submit an outline proposal to the Managing Editor.

5 BIOETHICS

Authors submitting a manuscript containing in-vivo animal work should submit details of all relevant Ethics Committee approval and authorization (eg, institute and/or government) and all revelant reference numbers. Details will be printed as a footnote to the paper.

6 PROOFS

The address to which the author's proofs are to be sent must be clearly indicated. Proofs will be despatched to the corresponding author. These must be corrected and returned to the publishers within 48 hours of receipt. Author's corrections must be restricted to printer's errors.

7 COPYRIGHT

Author(s) must sign a Copyright Transfer Agreement, transferring copyright of the article to the Society of Chemical Industry, and submit the original signed agreement with the paper when presented for publication. Where an article is prepared jointly, the corresponding author must obtain either the signature(s) of the co-author(s) to this agreement or their written permission to sign on their behalf.

8 OFFPRINTS

There are no page charges. Twenty-five offprints of each article are supplied free of charge. Additional offprints can be ordered at current printing prices.

9 INSTRUCTIONS TO AUTHORS OF RAPID REPORTS

Research results that merit very rapid publication can be submitted to the Journal as Rapid Reports. Letters accompanying submissions must state clearly why the paper should be considered for rapid publication. Reports must be written in clear, unambiguous English and authors must check their complete manuscript very carefully prior to submission because there will be no opportunity to revise the paper. Proofs will be sent to the author, but these must be returned, correcting printing errors only, within 48 hours or the author will be assumed to have made no corrections. The corresponding author must include full contact details including telephone, fax and e-mail (or these details for an alternative contact, should the corresponding author be unreachable). The proofs will be checked by the Technical Editor.

In order to maintain rapid publication, a Rapid Report must be no more than three printed pages in length, including figures, tables and references. This means that the submitted paper should be less than 1200 words, with a maximum combination of three figures and/or tables, and a maximum of 25 references. No colour illustrations will be accepted. All figures must be of the highest quality; photocopies will not be accepted. Each submission must include two hard copies of a double-spaced A4 (or 8.5 x 11 inch) manuscript, including high-quality artwork) and an electronic version of the whole paper saved on a PC disk, in a format compatible with MS Word 7 or lower. A copyright transfer agreement signed by all of the authors must also be submitted.

Authors will receive an immediate acknowledgement of receipt of their paper and, subsequently, notification of acceptance or rejection according to the referees' recommendations and the Executive Editorial Board's assessment.

Papers must not have been made publically available in print or electronic formats and may not be offered for publication elsewhere while under consideration by Pest Management Science. The corresponding author must obtain the written consent of all the co-authors prior to submission of the paper.

Send papers and correspondence to:

The Journals Manager
Pest Management Science (Rapid Reports)
SCI, 14/15 Belgrave Square
London SW1X 8PS, UK
F: +44 (0)20 7235 0887
E: pestmansci@soci.org


Editorial Board
EXECUTIVE EDITORIAL BOARD
G T Brooks
Editor-in-Chief
Brighton, UK
D R Clifford
Technical Editor
Bristol, UK
e-mail: d.r.clifford@Btinternet.com
L G Copping
Vice-Chairman
Saffron Walden, UK
e-mail: lcopping@globalnet.co.uk
R E Ford
Technical Editor
Sittingbourne, UK
e-mail: refblindmary@aol.com
I Ujváry
Hungarian Academy of Sciences Chemical Research Centre
Budapest, Hungary
e-mail: ujvary@matavnet.hu
R D Wauchope
North American Editor
USDA-ARS, Tifton, GA, USA
e-mail: don@tifton.cpes.peachnet.edu
[Authors in the Asia/Pacific region please note that you should send your papers to the Managing Editor of Pest Management Science at SCI, whose address is given in the Instructions to Authors.]
EDITORIAL BOARD
A Akers
BASF Agricultural Center, Limburgerhof, Germany
e-mail: info.service@basf-ag.de
D Atkinson
SAC, Edinburgh, UK
e-mail: d.atkinson@ed.sac.ac.uk
D R Baker
Orinda, CA, USA
e-mail: drbaker@attbi.com
R Bateman
CABI Bioscience: RPU, Berks, UK
e-mail: r.bateman@cabi.org
G Bell
Syngenta, Berkshire, UK
e-mail: gordon.bell@syngenta.com
D W Berg
Bayer AG, Leverkusen, Germany
e-mail: dieter.berg.db@bayer-ag.de
L B Brattsten
Ruttgers University
New Brunswick, NJ, USA
e-mail: brattsten@aesop.rutgers.edu
J E Casida
University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
e-mail: ectl@nature.berkeley.edu
T Clark
Syngenta
Berkshire, UK
e-mail: terry.clark@syngenta.com
A H Cobb
Harper Adams University College, Newport, UK
e-mail: ahcobb@harper-adams.ac.uk
M T D Cronin
Liverpool John Moores University, UK
e-mail: m.t.cronin@livjm.ac.uk
W J de Kogel
Wageningen University
The Netherlands
e-mail: w.j.dekogel@plant.wag-ur.nl
M A de Waard
Wageningen University
The Netherlands
e-mail: Marten.dewaard@fyto.dpw.wag-ur.nl
S O Duke
USDA-ARS, NPURU
University of Mississippi
Oxford, MS, USA
e-mail: sduke@olemiss.edu
J P Edwards
Central Science Laboratory
MAFF, York, UK
e-mail: j.edwards@csl.gov.uk
T Fujita
EMIL Project
Kyoto, Japan
e-mail: ped01545@nifty.com
D W Gammon
Pesticide Regulation
California EPA
Sacramento, CA, USA
e-mail: dgammon@cdpr.ca.gov
R Greenwood
University of Portsmouth
UK
e-mail: richard.greenwood@port.ac.uk
R G Hall
Syngenta Crop Protection AG
Basel, Switzerland
e-mail: roger_graham.hall@syngenta.com
D Hamilton
Animal and Plant Health Service
Brisbane, Australia
e-mail: hamiltdj@dpi.qld.gov.au
B D Hammock
University of California, Davis, CA, USA
e-mail: bdhammock@ucdavis.edu
R M Hollingworth
Michigan State University,
East Lansing, MI, USA
e-mail: rmholl@pilot.msu.edu
D W Hollomon
University of Bristol, UK
e-mail: orchardhse@ukgateway.net
M Kern
Aventis CropScience
Frankfurt/Main, Germany
e-mail: manfred.kern@aventis.com
B P S Khambay
IACR-Rothamsted
Harpenden, UK
e-mail: bhupinder.khambay@bbsrc.ac.uk
D A Kleier
E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Company
Newark, DE, USA
e-mail: daniel.a.kleier@usa.dupont.com
G Le Patourel
Imperial College, Ascot, UK
e-mail: geoff.le_patourel@syngenta.com
P Leroux
INRA, Versailles, France
e-mail: lerouxp@versailles.inra.fr
Z-M Li
National Pesticide Engineering Research Center
Nankai University
Tianjin, China
e-mail: zml@tjlink.tisti.ac.cn
W A Matthews
Food Standards Agency, London, UK
e-mail: wendy.matthews@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk
A R McCaffery
Syngenta
Berkshire, UK
e-mail: alan.mccaffery@syngenta.com
J J Menn
Agricultural Biotechnology and Crop Protection
Highland, MD, USA
e-mail: jjmenn@erols.com
K D Monson
Battelle Memorial Institute
Columbus, OH, USA
e-mail: monsonk@battelle.org
R Nauen
Bayer AG, Leverkusen, Germany
e-mail: ralf.nauen@bayercropscience.com
J R Plimmer
Tampa, FL, USA
e-mail: plimmer@aol.com
M Quadranti
Syngenta Crop Protection
Münchwilen AG
Stein, Switzerland
e-mail: marco.quadranti@syngenta.com
K D Racke
Dow Agrosciences
Indianapolis, IN, USA
e-mail: kracke@dow.com
N Ragsdale
USDA-Agricultural Research Service
Beltsville, MD, USA
e-mail: nnr@ars.usda.gov
L O Ruzo
PTRL West Inc., Hercules, CA, USA
e-mail: info@ptrlwest.com
I Shaw
Inst of Environmental Science & Research Ltd, Christchurch New Zealand
G Smagghe
Ghent University, Belgium
e-mail: guy.smagghe@rug.be
C H Walker
Colyton, UK
R J Williams
Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
Wallingford, UK
e-mail: rjw@ceh.ac.uk


 返回页首 


邮编:430072   地址:中国武汉珞珈山   电话:027-87682740   管理员Email:
Copyright © 2005-2006 武汉大学图书馆版权所有