期刊名称:NEW PHYTOLOGIST
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
New Phytologist
© New Phytologist Trust
Instructions to Authors
Author Guidelines
New Phytologist is an online-only publication: read the Editorial by Alexander & Slater to find out why the journal moved to online-only in 2012 after 110 years of print (doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2011.03866.x)
www.newphytologist.com – for all the latest information
The Author Guidelines are available below and as a PDF here: nph_authorguidelines.pdf
Summary
- New Phytologist is an international electronic journal published 16 times a year, and is owned by a non-profit-making charitable trust dedicated to the promotion of plant science.
- Our regular submissions address fundamental questions across the spectrum of plant science. Short Letters and other submissions to the Forum section, as well as Research reviews, Rapid reports and both Modelling/Theory and Methods papers, are also encouraged.
- We are committed to rapid processing - from online submission using http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/newphytologist/, enabling the quickest possible peer review, through to the use of e-proofs and then publication 'as-ready' via Early View.
- There are no page or colour charges and a PDF version will be provided for each article.
- Authors may opt to make their article 'open access' by subscribing to the Wiley-Blackwell OnlineOpen service.
- If you have any queries do not hesitate to get in touch with Central Office or, if it is more convenient, our US Office.
Contacts
np-centraloffice@lancaster.ac.uk - for all general enquiries
Central Office Managing Editor Sarah Lennon, np-managinged@lancaster.ac.uk New Phytologist Central Office, Bailrigg House, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YE, UK tel: +44 1524 594691, fax: +44 1524 594696
US Office Richard J. Norby PhD, np-usaoffice@ornl.gov New Phytologist US Office, Building 2040, MS-6301, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, PO Box 2008, Bethel Valley Road, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6301, USA tel: +1 865 576 5261, fax: +1 865 574 9501
Aims and scope
New Phytologist publishes excellent, novel, rigorous and timely research and scholarship in plant science and its applications. Falling within four sections – Physiology & Development, Environment, Interaction and Evolution – articles cover topics that range from intracellular processes through to global environmental change. Cross-disciplinary approaches are particularly encouraged but for guidance the journal is organized as follows and recognizes that techniques from mole cular and cell biology, and functional genomics through to modelling and system-based approaches will be applied across the whole spectrum of plant science:
- Physiology & Development: intra/inter-cellular signalling, long-distance signalling, physiology, development, eco-devo – phenotypic plasticity, transport, biochemistry.
- Environment: global change and Earth system functioning, environmental stress, ecophysiology, plant–soil interactions, heavy metals.
- Interaction: multitrophic systems, mycorrhizas and pathogens, fungal genomics, nitrogen-fixing symbioses.
- Evolution: molecular evolution, population genetics, mating systems, phylogenetics, speciation, plant–enemy coevolution.
The following policies on scope apply:
- Fungal papers: New Phytologist accepts papers that deal with the interactions between fungi and living plants (essentially mycorrhizal fungi, plant pathogens, endophytes, rhizosphere/ phyllospere organisms and lichens) or with the biology/molecular biology/genetics/evolution of those fungi relevant to their interactions with plants. Papers on general mycological topics (e.g. databasing, bioinformatics, fungal evolution), which are of particular relevance to those working with plant-associated fungi are also accepted. Whilst we recognise that the great majority of fungi can be said to interact with plants through their role in the breakdown of dead plant material and in nutrient cycling, papers on these topics do not fall within the journal’s remit.
- Plant-relevant soil processes: New Phytologist considers studies in soil microbiology and biogeochemical cycling where these are explicitly linked to an aspect of plant performance or plant community processes.
- Use of transgenic organisms: New Phytologist expects transgenic studies to generate at least 10 independent lines for preliminary characterisation. From these lines, data from two or more independent lines that show a common and stable phenotype should be analysed and presented.
Review procedure and editorial policy
Is my paper suitable for New Phytologist? New Phytologist is asked to consider an increasingly large number of papers. To maximise the number published we are expanding the journal in size and are asking Authors to write the most concise papers they can (see word limit restrictions). It is, however, not possible to keep pace with the number of submissions and consequently competition for space is high with a current acceptance rate < 20%.
All New Phytologist submissions should focus on timely research that provides new insights into the broad principles of plant science. The original research should address clear hypotheses or questions and offer new insights on topics of interest to a broad cross-section of our readers. Studies that report incremental advances or are narrow in scope are not appropriate. Authors should include answers to the following questions (max. 50 words per question) in a covering letter, to help the Editors decide whether to send the manuscript for peer review:
1. What hypotheses or questions does this work address?
2. How does this work advance our current understanding of plant science?
3. Why is this work important and timely?
Presubmissions If you are unsure whether your paper falls within the scope of New Phytologist you may submit a presubmission enquiry; send the abstract of your paper, together with a covering letter that includes answers to the three questions above, to the Managing Editor (np-managinged@lancaster.ac.uk).
What happens during review? All manuscripts are allocated to a relevant member of the Editorial board, who decides whether the paper should go forward to peer review. Those that do not will be returned at this stage; we make every effort to do this as quickly as possible (usually within 6 days) so that the authors can take their work forward without delay. Papers sent out for review will, typically, be assessed by two or three independent referees. Authors may nominate potential referees. These should not have generally have been coauthors or collaborators within the past 3 years, nor should they have any other conflict of interest. If authors wish to request the exclusion of certain reviewers specific justification must be provided in the covering letter for the Editor's consideration.
Decisions Editors make a final decision based on the referees' advice balanced with the editorial policy of the journal to: accept subject to revision, advise major revision (where it is likely that substantial revisions will bring the paper up to New Phytologist standards) or reject (where the work typically has technical problems and/or fails to meet our standards regarding novelty, insight and significance). Revised manuscripts must be received by the date stated by the Editor in the decision letter; if received after this date, the manuscript will be treated as a new submission. Revised manuscripts may be sent for further review, at the Editors' discretion. All resubmitted manuscripts will be treated as new submissions and undergo the full review system. New Phytologist is committed to rapid publishing. To this end, we strive to return the Editor's decision and reviewer comments within 28 days of submission and to publish papers within 2 months of the acceptance date.
Please note our policy restricting the length of articles. Regular research papers that exceed 6500 words (including Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion and Acknowledgements) will be returned to authors without review.
New sequence data must be deposited in the EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ Nucleotide Sequence Databases, accession numbers obtained and the data made fully available at the time of publication. Authors including microarray data should comply with MIAME recommendations (for guidance see http://www.mged.org/Workgroups/MIAME/miame_checklist.html).
Manuscripts submitted to New Phytologist are considered on the understanding that they have not been published, and are not under consideration for publication, elsewhere; and that all persons entitled to authorship have been named and have approved the final version of the submitted manuscript. Submitting authors will be asked to declare this information during the submission process.
What happens after acceptance? Central Office will get in contact shortly after the Editor’s decision to accept your article to provide details of preparation for publication.
Article types
New Phytologist publishes several types of articles. Where appropriate, these may include supporting information which will be published in addition to the full text article.
Original research articles comprise the largest section of the journal and include Full papers, Rapid reports and Methods. Full papers report complete studies that provide new and valuable insights into plant science; they should not exceed 6500 words (see Style notes) and those that do will be returned without review. Rapid reports differ in that the nature of the findings makes priority publication of particular scientific importance, and your covering letter must state clearly why this is considered to be the case. They will be shorter than usual, c. 3000 words, with four figures and/or tables. Attention to both our style requirements and language must be excellent. If we decide that this route is appropriate, we would then give the paper priority in both peer review and subsequent publication. Modelling/Theory and Methods papers should still typically focus, as with any other submission, on timely research that addresses fundamental questions in plant science. However, the novel or improved methodology/analytical approach will form an important component, and description and proper evaluation will be a significant proportion of the paper. Papers which only evaluate a new method/analytical approach or critically examine existing practice, will also be considered, where the conclusion is of wide interest to plant scientists.
New Phytologist also accepts articles that contain comment and review. Do refer to recent issues of the journal for guidance on the types of format that are acceptable. Generally, Letters are our most free-ranging type of article – we positively encourage the exchange of ideas and open debate, and welcome such contributions to the Forum. Up to 1500 words is usual, with 1–2 figures as appropriate, but there are no specific restrictions; Forum articles are reviewed. Short Research reviews will be in the range 3500–4000 words, with up to 40 references and 6 figures/tables. Following a short introduction putting the area into context, and providing a 'way in' for the nonspecialist, these will concentrate on the most recent developments in the field. We also commission some content, such as Commentaries, Meeting reports and Tansley reviews. Enquiries or suggestions about these or other types of article are always welcome.
Early View
As soon as any New Phytologist paper is complete and final, it is published via Wiley-Blackwell's Early View service. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather than having to wait for the scheduled issue publication. A unique DOI number (see www.doi.org/faq.html for information) allows the article to be cited at this point, although once the article is included in an issue, volume and page numbers can be used as usual. Please note that Early View articles are complete and final, therefore no changes can be made after online publication.
OnlineOpen
OnlineOpen (open access publication) is available to authors 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 (US$3000) to ensure that the article is made available to non-subscribers upon publication via Wiley Online Library, as well as deposited in the funding agency's preferred archive. For the full list of terms and conditions, see http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/onlineopen#OnlineOpen_Terms
Any authors wishing to send their paper OnlineOpen will be required to complete the payment form available from our website at: https://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/onlineopen_order.asp
If you decide to select the OnlineOpen option, please contact the New Phytologist editorial offi ce (np-managinged@lancaster.ac.uk) to obtain a copy of the appropriate licence form. To preview the terms and conditions of open access agreements please visit http://www.wileyopenaccess.com/details/content/12f25db4c87/Copyright–License.html.
If you select the OnlineOpen option and your research is funded by the Wellcome Trust or members of the Research Councils UK (RCUK) you will be given the opportunity to publish your article under a CC-BY license supporting you in complying with Wellcome Trust and RCUK requirements. For more information on this policy and the Journal’s compliant self-archiving policy please visit: http://www.wiley.com/go/funderstatement or contact the Managing Editor (np-managinged@lancaster.ac.uk).
There is no requirement to inform Central Office that you intend to publish your paper OnlineOpen until after acceptance. 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.
English-language editing service
Authors for whom English is a second language may choose to have their manuscript professionally edited before submission to improve the English. A list of independent suppliers of editing services can be found at http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/english_language.asp. 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.
Submission procedure
- Compile the electronic version of your manuscript and complete the submission check list at the end of this document.
- Go to the New Phytologist ScholarOne Manuscripts site (http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/newphytologist/) to make a submission. Please note that submission must be done from the New Phytologist ScholarOne Manuscripts account belonging to the Corresponding Author.
- Enter the Author Centre and click 'submit a new manuscript'. Progress through the screens, inputting your manuscript information, Summary and covering letter. Input each author named on your manuscript; please check whether your co-authors already have a New Phytologist ScholarOne Manuscripts account as it is essential to use their registered email address to avoid creation of duplicate accounts. You are also encouraged to nominate up to six potential referees. There are instructions to guide you all the way through, and you can break off at any point in the process and come back to it later. Everything is saved automatically whenever you click on 'next'.
- The final stage is the upload of the manuscript:
- Main document (text, tables and figure legends) in Microsoft Word or Rich Text Format. - Figures (separate figure files), in EPS, TIFF, JPEG or GIF. - Supporting Information to be published in addition to the full text article (see the Supporting Information Information section for further information).
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It is possible to upload other file types such as LaTeX files and QuickTime movies, but ScholarOne Manuscripts will not convert these. Journal staff and referees will only be able to view these files if they have the relevant software. For more information on file types see the 'Author File Upload Tips' provided by ScholarOne (http://mchelp.manuscriptcentral.com/gethelpnow/guides.htm).
- All main document and figure files uploaded will be combined into a single PDF and also into a tagged HTML proof for peer review. The original files that you upload will be saved and can be accessed by the journal office if necessary. Note: if the manuscript text and figures are submitted as PDF files the HTML tags will not work and figures will not be labelled.
- Complete the submission process by clicking 'Submit', after which you will receive an automatic Submission Confirmation, which includes your manuscript number.
Any problems? If you encounter any technical difficulties, click on 'Get Help Now' when in ScholarOne Manuscripts or simply contact np-centraloffice@lancaster.ac.uk.
Style notes for all submissions
- Texts should be 1.5-spaced with settings for letter (8.5 x 11 inch) or A4 (210 x 297 mm) paper with wide margins. Use a consistent font throughout, for example Times New Roman 12-point (symbol palette for additional characters). Lines and pages should be numbered (to aid review use continuous numbering for lines). Both American and British English are acceptable if used consistently.
- On the first page, include a concise and informative title (for research papers, ideally stating the key finding or framing a question), authors and addresses. Where authors have different addresses, use numbered superscripts to refer to each address provided. State the author for correspondence and include their telephone and email details. Total word count for the main body of the text (Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, and Acknowledgements), word counts for each section plus the number of figures (indicating which figures should be published in colour), tables and supporting information must also be stated on the front page.
- The main body of the text for Regular research papers should not exceed 6500 words. Manuscripts over this limit will be returned without review. Please be as concise as possible consistent with an appropriate level of explanation for the science presented, with the Discussion in research papers not exceeding 30% of the total word count. Authors should also consider the use of online supporting information where appropriate.
- Arrange research papers under the headings Summary, Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Acknowledgements and References. In the case of Modelling/Theory papers, include a heading of Description in place of Materials and Methods, to include description of the model or theoretical framework.
- The Summary for research papers, which must be usable as a stand-alone document, must not exceed 200 words and should be organized using four bullet points to indicate (1) the research conducted, including the rationale, (2) methods, (3) key results and (4) the main conclusion, including key points of discussion. It should not contain citations of other papers. For reviews, keep to the word limit, but bullet points do not apply. A Summary is not required for Forum submissions.
- Five to eight key words must be given at the end of the Summary (research papers, reviews) or after the References (Forum submissions) to enable efficient searching online. Words that are in the title can, and should, be among these. Very short phrases and scientific names with their common equivalents (e.g. Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco)) are acceptable.
- Any Materials and Methods section should allow replication of all experiments described and demonstrate the validity of those experiments for the research being conducted.
Tables and figures
Tables
These must be self-explanatory and each presented on a separate page outside the main text, but as part of the same document. Following a concise (single-sentence), informative heading, each table should be fully understandable either through column headings or, if these are insufficient in themselves, through a footnote.
Figures
- Refer to all diagrams, graphs and photographs as 'Figures'.
- Present at approximately twice the size that they will appear. Ensure that, after reduction, they will be compatible with the double-column format of the journal (column width of 80 mm; maximum printed size of 226 x 170 mm).
- Subdivisions of figures should be labelled with lower case, bold letters (e.g. (a), (b)) and referred to in the text in the form (Fig. 1a), (Fig. 1a,b). Avoid including explanatory material in the figure itself – this should be in the legend.
- Present diagrams and graphs on a white background, with lines approx. 0.5 mm thick, any shading inserted as lines or dots, and symbols approx. 3 mm across. The preferred symbols, in order, are open circles, closed circles, open and closed squares, and open and closed triangles. The same symbol should be used for the same entity in different figures. Axes should be clearly marked with units in brackets after the axis title.
- With photographs, include any scale bars on the picture. Where a figure is made up of several photographs, these should be abutted unless this affects the clarity.
- Figure legends should be included with the main text of the paper, after the References. Key information describing each figure should be in the first sentence; the legend should be a self-contained, full explanation of the figure, with all abbreviations defined.
- In general, figures should be kept to a minimum consistent with scientific necessity.
- We need to receive your figures in electronic form. To minimise publication time of your manuscript and help you achieve the optimum quality for your published figures it is important that all electronic artwork is supplied in the correct format and resolution. Please save vector graphics (e.g. line artwork) in EPS format at 600 dpi, and bitmap files (e.g. half-tones) in TIFF format at 300 dpi.
- We recommend that you consult the Electronic Artwork Guidelines at http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/illustration.asp.
Colour
There are no colour charges and we welcome colour figures, which will be published in full colour in the online article. Figures submitted in black-and-white will be published as such in the online article. Please ensure that where colour figures are submitted, that their legends make reference to colour where necessary. To ensure optimal reproduction of your colour figure, please ensure that the file is provided in RGB format.
References
Citations in the text should take the following format:
Single author (Porter, 2013); two-author (Abraham & Elbaum, 2013); and three or more authors (Sinkkonen et al., 2012). Where different references would appear identical when cited in this manner, use letters after the date in the citations and reference list (Secco et al., 2012a,b). Where two authors have the same last name, add their initials (F. J. Zhao et al., 2010). Order lists of references in date order (oldest first), and alphabetically when of the same date: (Rokas et al., 2003; Kocot et al., 2011; Smith et al., 2011; Struck et al., 2011).
In press and unpublished citations Cite references 'in press' only if accepted by a named journal. All other references (including submitted papers and abstracts, personal communications and personal observations) must be cited in the text as unpublished (C. J. Frost & H. Liang, unpublished; R. J. Norby, pers. comm.; A. H. Fitter, pers. obs.) and should not be included in the reference list.
Reference list At end of the text list references alphabetically (up to a maximum of 10 authors per citation) using these standard forms:
(Regular research articles)
Amselem J, Cuomo CA, van Kan JAL, Viaud M, Benito EP, Couloux A, Coutinho PM, de Vries RP, Dyer PS, Fillinger S et al. 2011. Genomic analysis of the necrotrophic fungal pathogens Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and Botrytis cinerea. PLoS Genetics 7: e1002230.
(Research Report)
IPCC. 2007. Solomon S, Qin D, Manning M, Chen Z, Marquis M, Averyt KB, Tignor M, Miller HL, eds. Climate change 2007: the physical science basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge, UK & New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
Smith S, Rausher MD. 2011. Gene loss and parallel evolution contribute to species difference in fl ower color. Molecular Biology and Evolution 28: 2799–2810.
Strader LC, Chen GL, Bartel B. 2010. Ethylene directs auxin to control root cell expansion. Plant Journal 64: 874–884.
(Book)
Smith SE, Read DJ. 2008. Mycorrhizal symbiosis. Cambridge, UK: Academic Press.
(Book chapter)
Eckert CG, Samis KE, Dart S. 2006. Reproductive assurance and the evolution of uniparental reproduction in flowering plants. In: Harder LD, Barrett SCH, eds. The ecology and evolution of flowering. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 183–203.
(Thesis)
Darbah JNT. 2007. Impacts of elevated atmospheric CO2 and/or O3 on carbon gain and reproductive capacity in northern forest ecosystems. PhD thesis, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, USA.
(Web document)
Webb C, Ackerly D, Kembel S. 2009. Phylocom. Software for the analysis of phylogenetic community structure and character evolution. [WWW document] URL http://phylodiversity.net/phylocom/. [accessed 1 September 2011].
(‘In press’ article)
Schowalter TD. 2012. Insect herbivore effects on forest ecosystem services. Journal of Sustainable Forestry, in press.
References that are available online pending their appearance in a scheduled print (or online) issue (for New Phytologist papers this means availability in Early View) to be listed as:
Schulze S, Kay S, Büttner D, Egler M, Eschen-Lippold L, Hause, G. Krüger A, Lee J, Müller O, Scheel D et al. 2012. Analysis of new type III effectors from Xanthomonas uncovers XopB and XopS as suppressors of plant immunity. New Phytologist. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2012.04210.x
If work that is 'in press' from the authors' own lab(s) forms a close companion to the paper submitted, then an electronic version should be included with the submission. We recommend the use of a tool such as EndNote (http://www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp) or Reference Manager (http://www.refman.com/support/rmstyles.asp) for reference management and formatting.
Supporting Information
Supporting Information Data that are integral to the manuscript but impractical to include within the full text and typeset article (e.g., large-scale data sets and videos) may be presented as Supporting Information, which will be published in addition to the full text article. Data and information that are peripheral to the conclusions may, subject to Editor approval, be provided as supporting information if these data would be valuable to specialist readers and are not necessary for other readers to understand the experimental support for important claims and conclusions. All data that are directly relevant to, and necessary for support of the central claims and conclusions of the article must be presented in the manuscript itself. Authors should note that supporting information provides an opportunity to present data and information that would not normally be included within the full text article, rather than to reduce article length. It should be clearly stated at the time of submission that the material is intended to be made available in electronic form free of charge through www.newphytologist.com. Alternatively, if the size or format of the material is very large, the author will be asked to make it available on a permanent website, to which links will be set up. All supporting information available online is subject to the same copyright restrictions as published manuscripts and cannot be presented elsewhere without proper citation.
Presentation of Supporting Information The following categories of supporting information are acceptable: Figures, Tables, Methods, Videos/movies and Notes. Each item of supporting information should be specifically referred to in the main text (Supporting Information Fig. S1, Table S1, Video S1 etc.), numbered sequentially within each category, and a brief, single sentence legend for each listed in the 'Supporting Information' section at the end of the References. Full legends should be included in the Supporting Information files, and all text should be consistent with New Phytologist style. Citations are not encouraged in the Supporting Information as these are not linked or cross-referenced with literature databases. The material must be submitted in final form, ready for viewing. This supporting information is considered an integral part of the article and will be reviewed accordingly; it cannot be altered after acceptance.
Submission of Supporting Information Where possible authors should provide a single file containing all of the supporting information. Files should be as small as possible, and in appropriate formats, to allow rapid download.
Contact np-centraloffice@lancaster.ac.uk for any Supporting Information queries.
Abbreviations
All non-standard abbreviations must first appear in parentheses following their meaning written in full at first mention in the Summary, main text and each table and figure legend. Avoid abbreviations if possible in the title, headings and Summary.
New Phytologist standard and preferred abbreviations can be found in the Submission guide for Authors (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1469-8137/homepage/SubmissionGuideForAuthors.pdf).
Scientific names
If the species is in very common usage then the common name will suffice, although the scientific name should still be given at first mention (e.g. soybean (Glycine max)) in the Summary and main text. Otherwise, give the genus and species names at first mention in the Summary, main text and each table and figure. For subsequent uses, abbreviate genera to their initial letters, except where this could result in confusion between species. In all cases, give the genus, species and authority of species under study in the Materials and Methods section. Cultivars should be preceded by cv. Use a standard regional flora; for non-vascular plants and other organisms, cite standard or local works of reference. When referring to articles containing old nomenclature, the currently accepted forms should still be used; the old name should be given at first mention (e.g. Pulsatilla vulgaris (formerly Anemone pulsatilla)).
Statistics
When appropriate, a statistical treatment of data, stating what methods have been used, must be given. As a minimum, give some measure of variability, such as standard error or confidence interval, together with the mean. In presenting error bars on figures, make clear whether the bars represent one or two standard errors, or confidence limits. If necessary, present results of tests of significance, such as analysis of variance, in addition to tests of variability. After an analysis of variance, comparisons of treatment means that are restricted to specific comparisons planned before the collection of data are preferable to simultaneous tests of all treatment means. Present the number of degrees of freedom for error with all statistical analyses. The following are standard statistical parameters that require no definition: F, P, r, r2, t.
Units and symbols
The journal uses SI units wherever possible, but accepts that other units may on occasion have to be used. Products of two units must be written with a space between the units (e.g. 10 g m-2). Units derived by division must be written using the appropriate index (e.g. m s-1 (not m/s)). Note the placing of the name of a substance in, for example, 10 g mg-1 protein. Use the appropriate prefix for units and thus avoid using multipliers on axes of graphs or in headings of tables. When these have to be used, because no SI prefix is appropriate, apply the multiplier to the physical quantity, not to the unit. Thus, 135 000 cells should be written as cells x 10-5 = 1.35. The multiplier is that by which the original number has to be multiplied to yield the number given in the table or figure.
For volume units based either on the litre (e.g. l, ml, µl) or on the cubic metre (e.g. m3, mm3, cm3, dm3) will be accepted, provided that consistent use is made of one system only. For concentration the same applies, as well as units such as µM, mM and M.
Use units based on energy for heat or energy balance, and units based on photons for photochemical processes such as photosynthesis or photomorphogenesis. The waveband over which measurements are made should be specified (e.g. energy fluence rate (irradiance) of 650 W m-2 over the waveband 300–1000 nm; photosynthetic photon fluence rate (PPFR) of 720 µmol m-2 s-1 over the waveband 400–700 nm).
For radioactivity use the becquerel (Bq, disintegrations s-1) in preference to counts per minute (cpm) or disintegrations per minute (dpm). For simple molecules, indicate labelling by writing the isotope in the chemical formula (e.g. 14CO2, 15NH4+). For other molecules, place the isotope in square brackets directly in front of the name without a hyphen or space (e.g. [3H]alanine). Indicate the positions of isotopic labelling by numbers or prefixes placed within the bracket and followed by a hyphen (e.g. [6-14C]glucose). The symbol U indicates uniform labelling (e.g. [U-14C]glucose).
Legal requirements
- Submissions must not have been published in, or accepted for publication by, any other journal.
- New Phytologist requires that all Editors, authors, and peer reviewers disclose any potential sources of conflict of interest. Any interest or relationship, financial or otherwise, that might be perceived as influencing objectivity is considered a potential source of conflict of interest. These must be disclosed when directly relevant or indirectly related to the work that the authors describe in their manuscript. The existence of a conflict of interest does not preclude publication in this journal. It is the responsibility of the corresponding author to review this policy with all authors and to collectively list ALL pertinent commercial and other relationships, including the provision of material or services.
- The policy of the New Phytologist Trust is to acquire an exclusive licence for all contributions (an Exclusive Licence Form (ELF) will need to be signed after any article is accepted for publication: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1469-8137/homepage/nph_caf.pdf). However, the Trust will not put any limitation on the personal freedom of the author(s) to use material contained in the article in other works. We recognize the need for activities such as posting preprints or the actual published text on personal or departmental web pages, copying in full or after adaptation for teaching purposes, and reproduction in full or after adaptation in any volume of which they are editor or author. Permission will automatically be given for these subject to normal acknowledgement.
- Certain funders, including the NIH, members of the Research Councils UK (RCUK) and the Wellcome Trust require deposit of the Accepted Version in a repository after an embargo period. Details of funding arrangements are set out at the following website: http://www.wiley.com/go/funderstatement. Please contact the Managing Editor (np-managinged@lancaster.ac.uk) if you have additional funding requirements.
- Where copyright is held by the contributor's employer, the Trust requires non-exclusive permission to deal with requests from third parties.
- If your contribution includes material not in your copyright and not covered by fair use/fair dealing, permission must be obtained from the relevant copyright owner (usually the publisher or via the publisher) for the non-exclusive right to reproduce the material worldwide in all forms and media, including electronic publication.
Author submission checklist for New Phytologist
This checklist is designed to help ensure that you have gathered all the necessary information required for submission and that your manuscript is in the correct format. Please ensure that you read the detailed Author Guidelines (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1469-8137/homepage/SubmissionGuideForAuthors.pdf) before you begin preparation of your manuscript.
Information required
- Have you prepared your covering letter, and included answers to the three key questions set out in the Author Guidelines?
- Have you read the exclusive licence agreement and are you able to sign it on behalf of all authors? Note that manuscripts submitted to New Phytologist are considered on the understanding that they have not been published, nor under consideration for publication, elsewhere.
- Have all persons entitled to authorship been named and each approved the final version of the submitted manuscript?
- Have you identified up to six potential reviewers and can you provide their email addresses?
- Does this paper form a close companion to other work in press? If so please supply an electronic version of this paper.
- Is this paper a resubmission? If so do you have the previous manuscript number and have you prepared the point-by-point response document as requested by the editor?
Manuscript preparation
- Is your manuscript prepared according to New Phytologist style as set out in the Author Guidelines?
- Is the text 1.5-spaced, the pages numbered and continuous numbering used for lines?
- For regular research papers is the main body of the text below 6500 words? Those exceeding the limit will be returned without review.
- On the front page have you included the title, authors and addresses, correspondence details, word counts and the number of tables, figures (indicating which should be reproduced in colour) and supporting information?
- For research papers is your summary no more than 200 words and is it organized using four bullet points to indicate (1) the research conducted, including the rationale, (2) methods, (3) key results and (4) the main conclusion, including key points of discussion?
- Are the references and in-text citations formatted according to the journal style?
- Are the tables self-explanatory and each presented on a separate page outside the text, but as part of the same document?
- Have you prepared the original figures in electronic form and at high enough resolution? Wiley-Blackwell recommends 600 dpi Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) for line art, and 300 dpi TIFF for continuous tone, but figures can also be set from other formats. Are your colour figures provided in RGB Format?
- Is supporting information included with your paper? Is a brief listing included at the end of the main document, after the References, and are full legends included with the supplementary files and formatted according to journal style?
- Have you completed the submission process? Submission is complete when you receive a Successful Submission Confirmation that includes your manuscript number. s Supporting Information included with your paper? Is a brief listing included at the end of the main document, after the References, and are full legends included with the supplementary files and formatted according to journal style?
- Have you completed the submission process? Submission is complete when you receive a Successful Submission Confirmation that includes your manuscript number.
Last modified: 18 April 2013
Author Guidelines
Editorial Board
All journal and manuscript queries should be directed to the Managing Editor: np-managinged@lancaster.ac.uk
Central Office | Section Editors | Tansley Reviews Editor | Editors | Board of Advisors
Editor-in-Chief
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Sarah Lennon Managing Editor |
Holly Slater Senior Commissioning Editor |
Nichola Hetherington Production Manager
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Fiona Tooke Peer Review Manager |
Michael Panagopulos Development Coordinator
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Alex Orlek Editorial Assistant |
Jill Brooke Journal and Finance Administrator |
Helen Hitchings Journal Administrator |
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New Phytologist Central Office np-centraloffice@lancaster.ac.uk |
USA Office np-usaoffice@ornl.gov |
Section Editors
Tansley Review Editor
Editors
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Richard J. Abbott University of St Andrews, UK rja@st-andrews.ac.uk |
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David Ackerly University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA dackerly@berkeley.edu |
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Amy T. Austin University of Buenos Aires, Argentina austin@ifeva.edu.ar |
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Colin Brownlee The Marine Biological Association, UK cbr@mba.ac.uk |
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John M. Christie University of Glasgow, UK John.Christie@glasgow.ac.uk |
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Lynda F Delph Indiana University, IN, USA ldelph@indiana.edu |
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Ian A. Dickie Lincoln University, Lincoln, New Zealand Ian.Dickie@lincoln.ac.nz |
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Andrew Groover Davis, CA, USA agroover@fs.fed.us |
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André Kessler Cornell University, NY, USA ak357@cornell.edu |
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Hongzhi Kong Institute of Botany, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, China hzkong@ibcas.ac.cn |
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Elena M. Kramer Cambridge, MA, USA ekramer@oeb.harvard.edu |
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Keith Lindsey University of Durham, UK keith.lindsey@durham.ac.uk
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Nathan G. McDowell Los Alamos National Lab, NM, USA mcdowell@lanl.gov |
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Richard J. Norby Oak Ridge National Laboratory, TN, USA norbyrj@ornl.gov |
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Maarja Öpik University of Tartu, Estonia maarja.opik@ut.ee |
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Anne E. Osbourn John Innes Centre, UK anne.osbourn@bbsrc.ac.uk |
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Ralph Panstruga Aachen University, Germany panstruga@bio1.rwth-aachen.de |
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Marinus Pilon Colorado State University, CO, USA pilon@lamar.colostate.edu |
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Andrea Polle University of Göttingen, Germany apolle@gwdg.de |
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Natalia Requena University of Karlsruhe, Germany natalia.requena@bio.uni-karlsruhe.de |
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Henk Schat Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands hschat@bio.vu.nl |
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Marc-André Selosse Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, France ma.selosse@wanadoo.fr |
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Co-Editors
T.J. Brodribb, Tasmania, Australia H.P. Comes, Salzburg, Austria S. Crafts-Brandner, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA J.H. Graham, Lake Alfred, FL, USA G.J. Loake, Edinburgh, UK M.R. McAinsh, Lancaster, UK H. Ougham, Aberystwyth, UK A. Sadanandom, Durham, UK A.G. Smith, Cambridge, UK J.R. Stinchcombe, Toronto, Canada M.G. Tjoelker, Penrith, Australia
Board of Advisors
G. van den Ackerveken, Utrecht, the Netherlands K.L. Adams, Vancouver, Canada E.A. Ainsworth, Urbana, IL, USA C.P. Andersen, Corvallis, OR, USA M.M. Barbour, Sydney, Australia S.C.H Barrett FRS, Toronto, Canada D.J. Beerling, Sheffield, UK P. Bonfante, Torino, Italy M. Bucher, Köln, Germany M.M. Campbell, Toronto, Canada L.A. Cernusak, Canberra, Australia K. Clay, Bloomington, IN, USA S.P. DiFazio, Morgantown, WV, USA G. Douhan, Riverside, CA, USA M.R. Dudash, College Park, MD, USA A. J. Eckert, Richmond, VA, USA C. Eckert, Kingston, Canada D.M. Eissenstat, University Park, PA, USA N. Ferrol, Granada, Spain J. Flexas, Palma de Mallorca, Spain B.J. Glover, Cambridge, UK C. Goodwillie, Greenville, NC, USA K.S. Gould, Wellington, New Zealand J. Gray, Sheffield, UK D. Guo, Beijing, China U.G. Hacke, Edmonton, Canada B. Hause, Halle, Germany X-Q. He, Beijing, China M. van der Heijden, Zürich, Switzerland T. Helgason, York, UK B.R. Helliker, Philadelphia, PA, USA L.C. Hileman, Lawrence, KS, USA E.A. Hobbie, Durham, NH, USA A. Hodge, York, UK K. Hofmockel, Ames, IA, USA D. Johnson, Aberdeen, UK N.C. Kane, Vancouver, Canada F. Katagiri, St. Paul, MN, USA P.G. Kennedy, St. Paul, MN, USA R.T. Koide, Provo, UT, USA J. Kudla, Münster, Germany T.W. Kuyper, Wageningen, the Netherlands T. Lahaye, München, Germany L. Lanfranco, Torino, Italy M. Lascoux, Uppsala, Sweden J. Leake, Sheffield, UK
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F. Lens, Leiden, the Netherlands Y-K. Liang, Wuhan, China B. Lindahl, Uppsala, Sweden M.R. Macnair, Exeter, UK S. Mathews, Cambridge, MA, USA R.L. McCulley, Lexington, KY, USA S.P. McGrath, Rothamsted, UK A.A. Meharg, Belfast, UK L.M. Mercado, Exeter, UK S. G. Møller, New York, NY, USA L.C. Moyle, Bloomington, IN, USA K. Nara, Tokyo, Japan D.J. Obbard, Edinburgh, UK J. Pannell, Lausanne, Switzerland C. Parisod, Neuchâtel, Switzerland K.G. Peay, Stanford, CA, USA W.A. Peer, West Lafayette, IN, USA J. Peñuelas, Barcelona, Spain G-Y. Rao, Beijing, China J.A. Raven FRS, Dundee, UK S.C. Reed, Moab, UT, USA H. Rennenberg, Freiburg, Germany K.J. Rice, Davis, CA, USA S. Robatzek, Norwich, UK J.A. Rudgers, Albuquerque, NM, USA M.G. Ryan, Fort Collins, CO, USA S. Schmidt, Brisbane, Australia S.A. Sevanto, Los Alamos, NM, USA S.E. Smith, Adelaide, Australia C-P. Song, Kaifeng, China J. Sprent, Dundee, UK F. Takken, Amsterdam, the Netherlands A.F.S. Taylor, Aberdeen, UK A.R. Taylor, Wilmington, NC, USA J.E. Taylor, Lancaster, UK D. Tissue, Richmond, Australia D.B.C. Tholl, Blacksburg, VA, USA X. Xie, Tianjin, China M. Tsiantis, Köln, Germany M. Turnbull, Canterbury, New Zealand N. Verbruggen, Brussels, Belgium N. von Wiren, Tübingen, Germany J. Ward, Lawrence, KS, USA J. Xiang, Raleigh, NC, USA J. Yang, Shanghai, China S. Zaehle, Jena, Germany Y-G. Zhu, Beijing, China |
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