期刊名称:AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM HEALTH & MANAGEMENT

ISSN:1463-4988
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:MICHIGAN STATE UNIV PRESS, 1405 SOUTH HARRISON RD, STE 25 MANLY MILES BUILDING, E LANSING, USA, MI, 48823-5202
  出版社网址:http://www.tandfonline.com/
期刊网址:http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/uaem20
影响因子:1.047
主题范畴:ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES;    MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY

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



About the journal

Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management

Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management

 
ISSN
1463-4988 (Print), 1539-4077 (Online)
 
Publication Frequency
4 issues per year

Aims & scope

2012 Impact Factor: 0.767
Ranking: 75/100 (Marine & Freshwater Biology) and 173/210 (Environmental Sciences)   
2012 5-year Impact Factor: 1.129
Ranking: 66/100 (Marine & Freshwater Biology) and 152/210 (Environmental Sciences)
©2013 Thomson Reuters, 2012 Journal Citation Reports®

As the official journal of the Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management Society , Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management promotes understanding of the structure, function, and performance of healthy and damaged aquatic ecosystems (freshwater, marine, estuarine) from integrated, multi-disciplinary and sustainable perspectives. This peer-reviewed journal focuses on the development and application of management practices that will protect, maintain, remediate, or restore the health of these ecosystems and their sustainable use by humans.

Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management recognizes the need to explore the complex interactions between human society, ecology, economy/development, politics, and the environment. It also encourages a watershed approach which is influenced by atmospheric and terrestrial processes, both natural and anthropogenic. The journal provides a forum for the assessment and discussion of ecosystemic, integrated approaches to aquatic ecosystem research and management, including concepts and approaches that address health, integrity, performance, efficiency, remediation, natural recovery, restoration, conservation, and sustainable human use.

Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106

Abstracting & indexing

Abstracted/indexed in: Abstracts Journal; CAB International; Cambridge Scientific Abstracts (CSA): Aquatic Sciences & Fisheries Abstracts, Algology, Mycology, & Protozoology (Microbiology C), ASFA 1: Biological Sciences & Living Resources, ASFA 2: Ocean Technology, Policy & Non-Living Resources, ASFA 3: Aquatic Pollution & Environmental Quality, ASFA Aquaculture Abstracts, ASFA: Marine Biotechnology Abstracts, Biological Sciences Database, Biotechnology & Bioengineering Database, Ecology Abstracts, Environmental Sciences & Pollution Management Database, Microbiology Abstracts, Oceanic Abstracts, Pollution Abstracts, Toxicology Abstracts, Water Resources Abstracts, Zoological Record Plus; ISI Biological Abstracts; BIOSIS Previews; Current Contents/Agriculture, Biology, and Environmental Sciences; Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, Science Citaton Index Expanded, Zoological Record; NISC’s FISHLIT; and Fish and Fisheries Worldwide: Aquatic Biology, Aquaculture and Fisheries Resources.


Instructions to Authors

Please note that Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management uses CrossCheck™  software to screen papers for unoriginal material. By submitting your paper to Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management you are agreeing to any necessary originality checks your paper may have to undergo during the peer review and production processes.

Themes & topics

All manuscripts relevant to the objectives of Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management (AEHM) will be considered for publication. The major objective of the AEHMS and its publications is the promotion and adoption of ecosystem health concepts. It advocates an understanding of the structure, function and performance of aquatic ecosystems (freshwater, marine, estuarine) from an integrated, multi-disciplinary and sustainable perspective. The Society encourages the application of ecosystem-based science to management practices that will protect, maintain or restore the health of aquatic ecosystems. The Society welcomes papers that cover disciplines relevant to aquatic sciences such as ecology, microbial ecology, invasion biology, limnology, oceanography, eutrophication physiology, toxicology/contamination, food web dynamics, fish-fisheries, climate change, habitat, emerging tools/techniques, socio-economics, education, policy and environmental outreach.

Manuscript submission

Only manuscripts which meet the following requirements will be considered for publication by the AEHM:

·         Manuscripts must be original. They must not be published or be under consideration for publication elsewhere, in whole or in part. It is required that the lead author complete and sign the Transfer of Copyright form and include it with the manuscript upon submission.

·         The authors should agree to pay page charges by completing the Author–AEHMS Agreement form, as outlined in the Page Charges section (see below), and include it with the manuscript upon submission.

·         The Author Information form should be completed and included with the manuscript upon submission.

·         Before submission, every co-author must approve the manuscript.

·         It is highly recommended that the author check the length of the manuscript when it is formatted according to the section below on manuscript preparation. General submissions longer than 8 pages may be returned to the author to be condensed.

·         Manuscript format should follow the style guidelines given in the Instructions to Authors, including the method for citing references.

·         The clarity of writing in English must meet international publication standards. Authors whose native language is not English should consult someone with English as a first language before submitting their manuscript. Clear meaning will improve the speed and effectiveness of review and ensure that the content of the paper is assessed fairly. The AEHMS offers a manuscript preparation and technical service (Page by Page Editing). Potential contributors needing this editing service should contact the AEHMS editorial office for details.

·         Only black and white / greyscale printing is available in the journal. Please ensure no figures are in colour. If essential, colour figures are available as an online appendix but this is not recommended.

The manuscript may be submitted by email to the Chief Editor: mohi.munawar@dfo-mpo.gc.ca with a copy to jennifer.lorimer@dfo-mpo.gc.ca .

All manuscripts will be subject to rigorous peer review by at least two qualified and experienced referees. It is recommended that the author submit the names, addresses and e-mails of four potential referees (including two international referees) who are qualified to review the paper and have no conflict of interest with the authors. The author should indicate a reason and justification as to why those referees were recommended. The author’s suggested referees will be included in a pool of potential reviewers from whom the AEHMS will select to perform the review. It is not guaranteed that they will be chosen.

Processing of the manuscript

All papers submitted for publication are processed as quickly as possible by the editorial office. It is necessary that the deadlines given to authors to revise their manuscripts be respected. Following the initial peer review of the manuscript, a systematic response and/or rebuttal to all of the comments made by the referees is essential.  Manuscripts will not be considered further unless a systematic response is received.  If the revisions to the manuscript are returned after the given deadline, the manuscript may be subject to additional delays since it will lose its priority in the publication queue.

Page Charges

The AEHMS maintains a high international standard of technical and linguistic editing by contracting these services to qualified editorial personnel. To offset these costs, a fee is charged per published page for accepted manuscripts, as outlined on the AEHMS website ( www.aehms.org ).

Availability of funds is not a pre-requisite for the submission of papers. The AEHMS works toward publishing papers of merit on a global basis including both industrialized and developing countries. The acceptance of a paper is based on its merit. Approximately ten percent of the page budget of the journal has been reserved for submissions of manuscripts from developing countries. AEHMS developed a modified list of countries based on UN guidelines. Please contact the chief editor regarding the availability of such funding. Authors must indicate at the time of submission that they wish to apply for partial or full funding towards the page charges, supported by documentation confirming lack or shortage of official funding from their department or institute. The form to request page charges coverage can be found above in the Manuscript submission section. A membership with the Society is essential for receiving financial assistance for page charges. The membership fee will only be charged if the waiver is granted.

Any queries regarding page changes should be directed to Dr. Munawar, President of the AEHMS and Chief Editor of AEHM.

Manuscript size guidelines

The AEHM prefers to publish short, concise papers. Manuscripts of fewer than 8 printed pages including tables and figures will be given priority in publication. Papers longer than 8 pages are also welcome but may take longer processing in the queue depending on the accumulation of submissions. Very long papers will be returned to the authors for possible condensing. Invited papers may also have special requirements.  Due to size restrictions, appendices are not printed in the journal. If necessary, appendices may be posted on the publisher’s website and cited in the text as follows (Appendix 1: available at http://webaddress/).

Supplementary Files (appendices) should not be over 10 MB, at the largest. Please also keep in mind that the larger these files are, the longer they will take for users to download, especially readers without strong internet access. File sizes should always be kept small if possible. Authors may also supply supplementary data of any file type, but the more obscure the file type, the fewer the number of people who will be able to use them.

The appendix should be as concise as possible. It should not contain info that is not strictly necessary, even though it may be interesting. 

Manuscript preparation

General

Manuscripts should be submitted in clear and concise English. The authority for spelling is the Concise Oxford Dictionary. Authors may use either English or American spelling, but must be consistent throughout the paper.

Manuscript font should be Times New Roman, 11 pt font size, single line spaced, 2.54 cm (1”) margins, letter size paper (21.6×28 cm or 8.5×11”). Section titles/headings should always be placed on a separate line without accompanying text. Every page should be numbered; however, there should be no reference in the text to page numbers. The editors reserve the right to adjust the style to conform to the in-house style. Authors should keep a copy of their article since the journal cannot accept responsibility for damage or loss of papers in transit.

Authorship assignment

In a multi-authored paper, each author must have contributed significantly to the paper’s conception, data procurement, or analysis in order to be eligible for authorship.  The primary author is responsible for the conception and development of the paper. Co-authors should have assisted the primary author in various aspects of manuscript development such data procurement, analysis, interpretation and development of the draft.

The corresponding author must be identified with an asterisk. The e-mail address of the corresponding author must be included, as well as a current address if the address has recently changed. Only the corresponding author will be contacted regarding the status of the manuscript.

Abstract

A concise abstract of 250–300 words should synthesize the objectives, methods, major results, and conclusions. Acronyms and citations should not be included in the abstract. Two to six keywords, not already included in the title, should be supplied at the bottom of the abstract.

Text

The following order is used: title, authors, addresses (affiliations), abstract, keywords, introduction, methodology, results, discussion (or a combined results and discussion), conclusions, acknowledgements, funding, references, figures, and tables. If footnotes are included in the text, they should be kept to a minimum and be identified with superscript numbers. Footnotes are not encouraged except those accompanying tables. Double quotation marks are used for quotations within the text. Use “and” instead of the ampersand “&”.

Style

Write in past tense unless you are describing present or future situations. Keep sentences concise and short, not more than 30 words long. Do not use all caps for the title. Do not use italic text for Latin or other foreign phrases.  For example, use “et al.” not “ et al.

Units and symbols

Use the SI system (Système international d’unités) of unit symbols throughout the manuscript. Note that symbols are to be written in full when used as an adjective, e.g., 1-litre bottle. Use positive exponents for quantities (m 3 ) and negative exponents for concentrations (mg l ?1 ) and rates (g m ?3  h ?1 ). Periods are not used in these expressions. Use a decimal point to indicate the fractional part of a number, not a comma (e.g., 2.05). A space should be used to separate groups of 3 digits within a number (e.g., 4 600).

Abbreviations

Where long names of chemicals, processes, and institutions are repeated throughout the text, shortened versions or initials should be included in parentheses after the full name first appears. Thereafter, only the shortened version is to be used. Binomial/Latin names should always appear in italics and should be written in full for the first occurrence only. In succeeding occurrences, the genus name should be abbreviated to the first letter (e.g., Escherichia coli should appear as E. coli in following occurrences). However, where there are two or more genera having the same initial letter, these must be written in full throughout the text so that the reference is clear. The author of the binomial name may be indicated the first time the name is given, but should not be repeated throughout the text or in the title of the paper.

Common/vernacular names of species

Common names of species should be followed by the binomial/Latin name in the first occurrence in the text. They should be capitalized when referring to a specific species (e.g., Largemouth Bass, Mallard, Canadian Waterweed, Carolina Wren). The name should not be capitalized when referring to several species of similar type or if the species is undetermined (e.g., the lake was full of bass). For example, “Arctic Foxes” indicates members of the species Vulpes lagopus , whereas “Arctic foxes” indicates several foxes, of any species, from the Arctic.

Funding

Information about the funding received to carry out the research and/or publication may be included in the paper. A section entitled “Funding” should be included after the acknowledgements, before references.

References

All publications cited in the text must be included in the list of references following the text of the manuscript. References that are not cited in the text are not to be included. Citations in the text should be in the following formats: single author, (Smith, 1979); two authors, (Smith and Jones, 1979); three or more authors, (Smith et al., 1979); two citations, (Smith, 1979; Dawson, 1986); one author and two or more publications, (Smith, 1979, 1986); same author(s) with two publications in one year, (Smith, 1979a, 1979b); different authors with the same last name, (Smith, P., 1979; Smith, T., 1986). Names of institutions should be given in full with acronym in parentheses in the first instance and as the acronym in subsequent citations. For example, (United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA), 1998) and later instances (US EPA, 1998).

The list of references should be arranged alphabetically by the authors surnames and if appropriate, by year.

The manuscript should be checked carefully to ensure that the spelling of authors’ names and dates are the same in the text as in the reference list. All authors must be listed, the use of et al. within a reference is not allowed. References should be given in the following formats:

Journal article

Vollenweider, R.A., Munawar, M., Stadelmann, P., 1974. A comparative review of phytoplankton and primary production in the Laurentian Great Lakes. J. Fish. Res. Board Can. 31(5), 739-762.

Book

Cairns, J., Jr., Niederlehner, B.R., Orvos, D.R. (Eds.), 1992. Predicting Ecosystem Risk . Princeton Scientific Publication Co., Inc., Princeton, NJ, USA.

Chapter or section in a book

Dave, G., 1996. Harmonization of methods for determination of sediment and water quality in the Scandinavian countries. In: Munawar, M., Dave, G. (Eds.), Development and Progress in Sediment Quality Assessment: Rationale, Challenges, Techniques and Strategies , pp. 213-226. SPB Academic Publishing, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Report

Vollenweider, R.A., 1971. Scientific fundamentals of the eutrophication of lakes and flowing waters, with particular reference to nitrogen and phosphorus as factors in eutrophication. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris, France.

Ph.D. dissertation

Doe, J., 2009. Population dynamics of Lake Trout ( Salvelinus namaycush ) the upper Great Lakes region.  Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin – Madison, Madison, WI, USA.

Article in a foreign language

Hildebrand, H.H., Chávez, H., Compton, H., 1964. Aportación al conocimiento de los peces del arrecife Alacranes, Yucatán (México). (Contribution to the knowledge of Alacran reef fishes, Yucatan (Mexico). In Spanish). Ciencia 33(3), 106-135.

Conference presentation / Abstract from conference program book

Mandrak, N.E., Munawar, M., 2006. The Rise of Introduced Fishes and Fall of Fish Species at Risk in Lake Ontario: A Review. Presented at: 49th Annual Conference on Great Lakes Research, Great Lakes in a Changing Environment, 22-26 May 2006, Windsor, Ontario, Canada. International Association for Great Lake Research, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

Conference proceedings

Malley, D. (Ed.), 1986. Proceedings of conference, 3–5 Nov 1985. Publisher, City, Country.

Article in a conference proceedings

Leach, J.H., 1999. Title of presentation. In: Adams, C. (Ed.), Title of Proceedings, pp. 216-225. Publisher, City, Country.

Papers published in regularly published conference proceedings are given as articles in a journal. References for Ph.D. and Masters theses should include name of the university, city, province and country.

References to websites should include the date the page was accessed. Ensure the website consulted is credible. Content from publicly modifiable “wiki” sites (e.g. Wikipedia) is not acceptable for citation. Citation of website content is discouraged due to the lack of stability of websites in general.

Citations in the text for personal communications or unpublished data are not included in the list of references. Instead, the full affiliation must be given within the text for the person(s) whose work is cited; for example, (D. Malley, Freshwater Institute, Winnipeg, MB, Canada, pers. comm.).

Figures and illustrations

A list of numbered figure captions should be included in the manuscript following the references. Figures should be submitted as individual image files (e.g., jpg, tif, png). The file size should be no larger than 500 KB for each figure. The image must be of good quality, as well as clear and easy to read. Figures should not be submitted in colour since they are printed in black & white (grayscale) only.

Figures should be numbered consecutively in the order in which they are referred to in the text. Figures not cited in the text should be removed.

All lettering, graph lines and points on graphs should be sufficiently large, bold and clear to permit reproduction when the diagram has been reduced to a size suitable for inclusion in the journal. Hand drawing or lettering is not acceptable. Please see the copyright section given below for issues regarding use of copyrighted material such as Google Maps.

Tables

Tables should be numbered consecutively by their citation in the text. All tables must be referred to and cited in the text. Each table must be inserted on a separate sheet and given a suitable caption above. Footnotes should be given below the table and should be referred to by superscript letters. No vertical rules should be used. Tables should not duplicate results presented elsewhere in the manuscript.

Proofs

Proofs will be sent to the first-named author if no corresponding author is identified in multi-authored papers and should be returned to the publisher within 48 hours of receipt. Corrections should be restricted to typesetting errors. Any other alterations may be charged to the author. New material cannot be inserted. Any queries should be answered in full. Authors are urged to check proofs carefully before returning them since the inclusion of late corrections cannot be guaranteed.

Copyright

All authors must sign the “Transfer of Copyright” agreement before the article can be published. This transfer agreement enables the AEHMS and Taylor & Francis to protect the copyrighted material for the authors, but does not relinquish the author’s proprietary rights. The copyright transfer covers the exclusive right to reproduce and distribute the article, including reprints, PDFs, photographic reproductions, microfilm, or any other reproductions of similar nature and translations. Copyright transfer also includes the right to adapt the article for use in conjunction with computer systems and programs, including reproduction or publication in machine-readable form and incorporation in retrieval systems.

Authors who wish to include previously published figures in their papers are required to obtain permission from the rightsholder to reprint the third-party tables or figures. A copy of the permission must be given to the AEHM. This should be done in a timely fashion to avoid publication delays. The paper should state the permission for re-use and rightsholder information. If the rightsholder has supplied text for this purpose, please use their text; otherwise, please use the following format: © [Rightsholder]. Reproduced by permission of xxx.

The use of images from Wikipedia and Google maps is not acceptable.

Offprints

One complimentary copy of the journal issue in which the paper is published will be sent to the corresponding author. A PDF of the article is sent to all authors.

Additional offprints and issues can be ordered from the publisher using the order form that will accompany proofs.

 

Author Services
Visit our Author Services website for further resources and guides to the complete publication process and beyond.


Editorial Board

Chief Editor

Dr. M. Munawar, Research Scientist
Fisheries & Oceans Canada
Canada Centre for Inland Waters
867 Lakeshore Rd., P.O. Box 5050
Burlington, Ontario, Canada, L7R 4A6
Phone: 905-336-4867; Fax: 905-634-3516
Email: mohi.munawar@dfo-mpo.gc.ca

Editorial Office

Managing Editor
I.F. Munawar
 
Managing Advisor
D.F. Malley
 
Assistant to the Editor 
J. Lorimer
 
Technical Editor
S. Blunt
 
Editorial Coordinator
L. Elder

Editorial Advisors
O. Belykh, Russia
G. Dave, Sweden
T.A. Edsall, USA
W. Hamza, UAE
J.R. Kelly, USA
M. Kernan, USA
M. van der Knapp, Netherlands
F. Krupp, Qatar
V. Landenberg, Netherlands
J. Leach, Canada
N. Mandrak, Canada
E. Mills, USA
C.K. Minns, Canada
N.F. Munawar, UK
T. Nalepa, USA
A.R. Price, UK
H. Regier, Canada
J. Sherry, Canada
D. Wang, China
F. Md. Yusoff, Malaysia

Editorial Advisors
A. Al Azri, Oman
F. Al- Yamani, Canada
G. Christie, Canada
M. Fitzpatrick, Mexico
M. Galar-Martinez, USA
J. Jones, USA
J. Kinzelman, India
D. Kumar, USA
J. Makarewicz, Canada
C. Mason, Japan
T. Naganuma, Malaysia
G. Nagaraj, Canada
W. Norwood, USA
T. Reilly, USA
L.G. Rudstam, USA
S.T. Saeed, Kuwait
A.P. Sharma, India
S.-A. W¨angberg, USA
J. Watkins, USA

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