期刊名称:REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE

ISSN:1436-3798
出版频率:Continuous publication
出版社:SPRINGER HEIDELBERG, TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, HEIDELBERG, GERMANY, D-69121
  出版社网址:http://www.springer.com/east/home?SGWID=5-102-0-0-0
期刊网址:http://www.springer.com/east/home/generic/search/results?SGWID=5-40109-70-1136209-0
影响因子:3.678
主题范畴:ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

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



About the journal
Aims and scope

Regional Environmental Change focuses on the interactions between human and natural systems at the regional level, within the context of global change, vulnerability, and sustainable development. Regions considered may be at any appropriate scale and may differ widely, provided they are defined in a consistent way. They may include natural regions or those defined by human activities (such as river basins and ecosystems, metropolitan areas, agricultural or coastal regions). Ideally regions should be considered integrated units of the Earth System. Both theoretical and applied studies are welcomed, with an emphasis on work with a multi-disciplinary perspective.

Examples of issues to be addressed in the journal include:

Past and future changes in the environmental quality of regions and methods to analyze such changes

Vulnerability of natural and human systems, and regions, to environmental change, differential vulnerability between regions, sectors, ecosystems and/or social groups

Decision making processes regarding space and natural resources, transboundary issues, legislative frameworks, governance issues

Land-use change, use of environmental resources at the regional level, restoration/rehabilitation of degraded systems

Regional aspects of climate, climate change, and impacts on ecosystems, hydrology, human systems

Sustainability theory


Instructions to Authors
Instructions for Authors
Regional Environmental Change


Legal Requirements
The author(s) guarantee(s) that the manuscript will not be published elsewhere in any language without the consent of the copyright holders, that the rights of third parties will not be violated, and that the publisher will not be held legally responsible should there be any claims for compensation.

Authors wishing to include figures or text passages that have already been published elsewhere are required to obtain permission from the copyright holder(s) and to include evidence that such permission has been granted when submitting their papers.

Any material received without such evidence will be assumed to originate from the authors. Manuscripts must be accompanied by the "Copyright Transfer Statement". The form can be obtained from the Journal Product Site at the right hand side.
Submission of manuscripts
Authors must submit their articles to "Regional Environmental Change" online to facilitate quicker and more efficient processing. Electronic submission substantially reduces the editorial processing and reviewing times and shortens overall publication time.
Please log directly onto the link below and upload your manuscript following the on-screen instructions. For the review process, the manuscript has to be submitted as one single file (Word with embedded illustrations, tables, etc., no pdf). After acceptance, the final version of the manuscript has to be uploaded in an individual, open file to enable the publisher to work with it.

SUBMIT ONLINE (with link to https://www.editorialmanager.com/rec/)

Manuscript Preparation
Springer offers a template that can be used with Winword 7 (Windows 95), Winword 6 and Word for Macintosh for preparation of your manuscript.
The Word template is available:

via ftp:
Address: ftp.springer.de/ User ID: ftp
Password: your own e-mail address
Directory: /pub/word
file names: sv-journ.zip or sv-journ.doc and sv-journ.dot

via www:
ftp://ftp.springer.de/pub/Word
http://www.springer.de/author/index/html
file names: sv-journ.zip or sv-journ.doc and sv-journ.dot

The zip file should be sent unencoded.
Layout Guidelines
 All manuscripts are subject to copy editing.
 Use a normal, plain font (e.g., Times Roman) for text.
 For textual emphasis use italic types.
 For special purposes, such as for mathematical vectors, use boldface type.
 Use the automatic page numbering function to number the pages.
 Do not use field functions.
 For indents use tab stops or other commands, not the space bar.
 Use the table functions of your word processing program, not spreadsheets, to make tables.
 Use the equation editor of your word processing program or MathType for equations.

Title page
 A concise and informative title.
 The name(s) of the author(s), e.g. author's first name should be given in full.
 The affiliation(s) and address(es) of the author(s).
 The e-mail address, telephone and fax numbers of the communicating author.

Abstract
 Each paper must be preceded by an abstract presenting the most important results and conclusions in no more than 150 words.

Keywords
 Three to five keywords should be supplied after the Abstract for indexing purposes.

Abbreviations
 Abbreviations should be defined at first mention in the abstract and again in the main body of the text and used consistently thereafter. The international system of units (SI units) should be used.

Footnotes
 Footnotes should be avoided whenever possible. Essential footnotes to the text should be numbered consecutively and placed at the bottom of the page to which they refer.

Introduction
 The Introduction should state the purpose of the investigation and give a short review of the pertinent literature.

Materials and methods
 The Materials and methods section should follow the Introduction and should provide enough information to permit repetition of the experimental work.

Results
 The Results section should describe the outcome of the study. Data should be presented as concisely as possible, if appropriate in the form of tables or figures, although very large tables should be avoided.

Discussion
 The Discussion should be an interpretation of the results and their significance with reference to work by other authors.

Acknowledgements
 These should be as brief as possible. Any grant that requires acknowledgement should be mentioned. The names of funding organizations should be written in full.

References
The list of References should only include works that are cited in the text and that have been published or accepted for publication. Personal communications should only be mentioned in the text. In the text, references should be cited by author and year (e.g. Hammer 1994; Hammer and Sjöqvist 1995; Hammer et al. 1993) and listed in alphabetical order in the reference list.

Examples

Journal articles
 Grissom LE, Harcke HT (1997) Ultrasonography of nondevelopmental dysplasia of the hips. Pediatr Radiol 27: 70-74

Books
 Larcher W (1995) Physiolo-gical plant ecology, 3rd edn. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York

Multiauthor books
 Hovind HJ (1986) Traumatic birth injuries. In: Raimondi AJ, Choux M, Di Rocco C (eds) Head injuries in the newborn and infant. (Principles of pediatric neurosurgery) Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York, pp 87-109

If available the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) of the cited literature should be added at the end of the reference in question.

Example:

Dyall KG (1998) Relative and nonrelative finite nucleus optimized double zeta basis sets for the elements. Theor Chem Acc 99: 366-371 DOI 10.10007/s002149800025

References such as personal communication or unpublished data cannot be included in the reference list, but should be mentioned in the text in parentheses. This also applies to papers presented at meetings but not yet published or accepted for publication. A date should be given for both personal communicationsand unpublished data Papers which have been accepted for publication should be included in the list of references with the name of the journal and in press

Tables and illustrations
All illustrations (photographs, graphs or diagrams) and tables should be cited in the text, and each numbered consecutively throughout.
Illustrations must be restricted to the minimum needed to clarify the text.
Figure parts should be identified by lower-case roman letters (a, b, etc.). If illustrations are supplied with uppercase labeling, lower-case letters will still be used in the figure legends and citations.
Figure legends must be brief, self-sufficient explanations of the illustrations. The legends should be placed at the end of the text.
The preferred figure formats are EPS for vector graphics exported from a drawing program and TIFF for halftone illustrations. EPS files must always contain a preview in TIFF of the figure.
For submission of figures see below.

Line drawings
 Inscriptions should be legible, with initial capital letters and appropriately scaled to the size of the drawing. Scanned line drawings should be digitized with a resolution of 800 dpi relative to the final figure size.

Vector graphics
 Fonts used in the vector graphics must be included. Please do not draw with hairlines. The minimum line width is 0.2 mm (i.e., 0.567 pt) relative to the final size. EPS is the preferred file format. EPS files must always contain a preview in TIFF of the figure.

Half-tone illustrations (black and white and color)
 Please submit well-contrasted photographic prints with the top indicated on the back. For scanned halftone illustrations, a resolution of 300 dpi is usually sufficient. TIFF is the preferred file format.

Computer drawings
 Computer drawings are acceptable provided they are of comparable quality to line drawings (minimum resolution of 300 dpi). Computer-drawn curves and lines must be smooth. Lettering must be of high quality; Helvetica is the preferred font. Lettering fonts must be consistent within and among all figures.

Magnifcation
 Should be indicated by scale bars.

Plates
 Several figures or figure parts should be grouped in a plate on one page.

Size of figures
 The figures, including legends, should either match the width of the column (8,6 cm) or should not exceed the print area of 176 x 236 mm. In case reduction is absolutely necessary, please state the alternative scale desired. The publisher reserves the right to reduce or enlarge illustrations. Figure legends must be brief, self-sufficient explanations of the illustrations.

Tables
 Should have a title and a legend explaining any abbreviation used in that table. Footnotes to tables should be indicated by superscript lower-case letters (or asterisks for significance values and other statistical data).

Color illustrations
 Color figures will always be published in color in the online version. In print, however, they will only appear in color if the author agrees to make a contribution of Euro 950/US $ 1,150 (plus VAT) per article. Otherwise the figures will be printed in black and white.
Electronic Supplementary Material
Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM) for a paper will be published in the electronic edition of this journal provided the material is:

 submitted in electronic form together with the manuscript
 accepted after peer review

ESM may consist of:
 information that cannot be printed: animations, video clips, sound recordings (use QuickTime, .avi, .mpeg, animated GIFs, or any other common file format)
 information that is more convenient in electronic form: sequences, spectral data, etc.
 large quantities of original data that relate to the paper, e.g. additional tables, large numbers of illustrations (color and black & white), etc.

Legends must be brief, self-sufficient explanations of the ESM. ESM is to be numbered and referred to as S1, S2, etc.
After acceptance for publication, ESM will be published as received from the author in the online version only. In the printed article, full reference will be given to the ESM and vice versa.
Proofreading
Authors are informed by e-mail that a temporary URL has been created from which they can obtain their proofs. Proofreading is the responsibility of the author. Authors should make their proof corrections on a printout of the pdf file supplied, checking that the text is complete and that all figures and tables are included.

The author is entitled to formal corrections only. Substantial changes in content, e.g. new results, corrected values, title and authorship are not allowed without the approval of the responsible editor. In such a case please contact the Editorial Office or the Editor-in-Chief before returning the proofs to the publisher. After online publication, corrections can only be made in exceptional cases and in the form of an Erratum, which will be hyperlinked to the paper.

Online First
Papers will be published online about one week after receipt of the corrected proofs. Papers published online can already be cited by their DOI. After release of the printed version, the paper can also be cited by issue and page numbers.
Offprints, Free Copy
One complimentary copy of the Journal will be supplied to the communicating author for each manuscript. Offprints are available at cost price, provided the order form is returned together with the corrected page proofs.
Springer Open Choice
In addition to the traditional publication process, Springer now provides an alternative publishing option: Springer Open Choice (Springer's open access model). A Springer Open Choice article receives all the benefits of a regular article, but in addition is made freely available through Springer's online platform SpringerLink. To publish via Springer Open Choice upon acceptance of your manuscript, please click on the link below to complete the relevant order form and provide the required payment information. Payment must be received in full before free access publication.
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Editorial Board
Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief:
Wolfgang Cramer
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
PO Box 60 12 03,
14412 Potsdam, Germany
Tel: +49-331-288-2637
E-mail: rec@pik-potsdam.de
http://www.pik-potsdam.de/~cramer

Assistant to the Editor-in-Chief:
Gabriele Dress
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
PO Box 60 12 03,
14412 Potsdam, Germany
Tel: +49-331-288-2637
E-mail: rec@pik-potsdam.de

Editors:
Martin Beniston
University of Geneva
Chair for Climate Research
Site de Battelle / D
7, chemin de Drize
CH-1227 Carouge / GE
Switzerland
Phone: +41 (0)22 379 07 69
E-mail: Martin.Beniston@unige.ch

Peter Burbridge
Centre for Coastal Management
Ridley Building
University of Newcastle
Newcastle NE1 7RU, United Kingdom
Tel.: +44-191-222-5607
E-mail: p.r.burbridge@ncl.ac.uk

Ruth DeFries
Earth Systems Science Interdisciplinary Center
Computer and Space Sciences Building
and Department of Geology
University of Maryland
2181 Lefrak Hall
College Park, MD 20742
Tel.: +1-301-405 4884
E-mail: rdefries@geog.umd.edu

Anthony G. Patt
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Schlossplatz 1
A-2361 Laxenburg,
Austria
Phone: +43 2236 807 306
E-mail: patt@iiasa.ac.at

Editorial Board:

Joe Alcamo Kassel, Germany
Jeroen van den Bergh Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Winfried Blum, Wien, Austria
Bodo von Bodungen, Rostock, Germany
Patrick Bourgeron Boulder, CO, USA
Harald Bugmann, Zrich, Switzerland
Osvaldo Canziani, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Franciscus Colijn, Geesthacht, Germany
Robert Costanza, Burlington, VT, USA
Tony Edwards, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Suren Erkman, Genve, Switzerland
Tibor Farag, Budapest, Hungary
Bernhard Glaeser, Berlin, Germany
Ing-Marie Gren, Stockholm, Sweden
Dolf de Groot, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Nikolay Kasimov, Moscow, Russia
Hartwig Kremer, Geesthacht, The Netherlands
Valentina Krysanova, Potsdam, Germany
Jacek Namiesnik, Gdansk, Poland
Edmund Penning-Rowsell, Middlesex, United Kingdom
Michael Redclift, London, United Kingdom
Agustin Sanchez-Arcilla, Barcelona, Spain
Rafael Sarda, Blanes, Spain
B. L. Turner II, Worcester, MA, USA
Kerry Turner, Norwich, United Kingdom
Brian Walker, Canberra, Australia
Fredrik Wulff, Stockholm, Sweden

Founding Editor:
Wim Salomons, Haren, The Netherlands 


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