期刊名称:MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Print version: ISSN 0171-8630 Online version: ISSN 1616-1599
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Companion Journal to Aquatic Biology and Aquatic Microbial Ecology
MEPS and AME have received international recognition as the leaders in their respective fields of science.
History
Marine Ecology Progress Series (MEPS) was founded by Professor Otto Kinne. Its original concept was based on 'Marine Ecology' - the first comprehensive, integrated treatise on life in oceans and coastal waters - conceived, contributed to, organized and edited by Otto Kinne, and published by John Wiley & Sons
MEPS continues to lead in the number of citations
Of all the journals currently listed under 'Marine & Freshwater Biology' in the Journal Citation Reports for 2012, MEPS features the highest number of Total Cites: 32 906. At the same time MEPS's Impact Factor of 2.546 is in the top tier of primary marine ecology journals.
MEPS also scores highly in the ranking of influence assessed by eigenfactor.org. In both the ISI categories "Marine & Freshwater Biology" and "Oceanography", arranged by "EigenFactor", MEPS occupies clear No. 1 positions out of 88 and 56 journals, respectively.
Aim
MEPS serves as a worldwide forum for all aspects of marine ecology, fundamental and applied. The journal covers: microbiology, botany, zoology, ecosystem research, biological oceanography, ecological aspects of fisheries and aquaculture, pollution, environmental protection, conservation, resource management.
Ecological research has become of paramount importance for the future of humanity. The information presented here should, therefore, encourage critical application of ecological knowledge for the benefit of mankind and, in fact, of life on earth. Marine Ecology Progress Series strives for
- complete coverage of the field of marine ecology
- the highest possible quality of scientific contributions
- quick publication
- a high technical standard of presentation
Scope
MEPS is international and interdisciplinary. It presents rigorously refereed and carefully selected Research articles, Reviews and Notes, as well as Comments/Reply Comments (for details see MEPS 228:1), Theme Sections, online Discussion Forums and As I See It (for details consult Guidelines for MEPS Authors) concerned with:
- Environmental factors: Tolerances and responses of marine organisms (microorganisms, autotrophic plants and animals) to variations in abiotic and biotic components of their environment; radioecology.
- Physiological-ecological mechanisms: Auto- and heterotrophy; thermo-, ion-, osmo- and volume-regulation; stress resistance; population genetics and ecological genome research; orientation in space and time; migrations; behavior; chemical ecology.
- Molecular Marine Ecology: Molecular basis of ecological processes.
- Cultivation: Maintenance and rearing of, as well as experimentation with, marine organisms under environmental and nutritional conditions which are, to a considerable degree, controlled; analysis of the physiological and ecological potential of individuals, populations and species; determination of nutritional requirements; ecological aspects of aquaculture; water-quality management; culture technology.
- Dynamics: Marine ecosystems; flow patterns of energy and matter as these pass through organisms, populations and ecosystems; biodiversity; trophic interrelations; production, transformation and decomposition of organic matter; plankton ecology; benthos ecology; estuarine and coastal ecology; wadden-sea ecology; coral-reef ecology; deep-sea ecology; open-ocean ecology; polar ecology; theoretical ecology; ecological methodology and technology; ecological modelling and computer simulation.
- Ocean management: Anthropogenic impacts: their role as modifiers and deformers of living systems, their biological consequences and their management and control; inventory of living resources in coastal areas, estuaries and open oceans; ecological aspects of fisheries; pollution of marine areas and organisms; protection of life in the seas; management of populations, species and ecosystems; management of coastal zones and sea areas; biotechnology.
- Eco-ethics: Marine ecological research relevant to human thought and conduct oriented to what is right or wrong, beneficial or destructive for the total system 'Homo sapiens plus nature'. For details see the editorial in MEPS 153:1-3 and the Eco-Ethics International Union (www.eeiu.org)
Conflicts of interest
Authors, Reviewers and Editors must disclose relationships (e.g. financial, economic, institutional) that may affect the integrity of the scientific process.
Open Access
Authors may purchase open access for their article at the time of manuscript acceptance. Inter-Research offers 2 types of open access for MEPS:
(1) Free Access. This allows free access to articles but their re-use is restricted by copyright. The fee is €500 for articles of 1–8 published pages*, €800 for 9–14 pages, and €1000 for >14 pages.
(2) Open Access under the Creative Commons by Attribution (CC-BY) Licence. Copyright remains with the authors, and re-use is unrestricted. The fee is €900 for articles of 1–8 published pages, €1200 for 9–14 pages, and €1400 for >14 pages.
Articles not published with open access (i.e. initially available to journal subscribers only) will become Free Access 5 years after publication. In addition, Free Access is given to Feature Articles at no cost to the authors.
Authors whose papers are eligible for Free Access at no cost at the time of publication may choose to publish Open Access CC-BY by paying the price difference (€400).
Only papers clearly marked with "CC BY" in the top right corner of the front page of an article are published with the Creative Commons by Attribution Licence. The CC-BY option was not available for Inter-Research journals before 1 April 2013. Older papers marked "Open Access" but not marked "CC BY" are published under the Free Access option.
*As a rough guide, 1 printed page = 3 manuscript pages
Subscription information
All MEPS articles are available online. Articles published 5 years ago or more may be accessed freely by all users. Articles published in 2008 or earlier are currently available.
Annual Publication Program/ Subscription Information
2014: 23 volumes, Vols 497 to 519
Annual rate for 2014 (print and online versions): € 4577
Please add postage, handling and insurance charges:
Germany € 69 per annum; all other countries € 207.
Missing issues must be claimed within 4 months of publication.
Back volumes are available at substantially reduced prices; for details write to publisher.
Tables of contents and abstracts are available free of charge on the Internet via World Wide Web.
Subscriptions are entered with annual prepayment only. They must be addressed directly to the publisher.
Instructions to Authors
The Editors consider for publication:
- Research Articles (target: ~6000 words)
- Reviews, state-of-the-art evaluations of important current research areas
- Notes, brief reports of important new information deserving priority publication (target: <3000 words)
- Comments, critical, fair assessments of published works and Reply Comments, replies to Comments (target: ~2000 words); for details on Comments/Reply Comments click here)
- As I See It, important, personal views on hot topics (brief and fair)
- Theme Sections, integrated expert analyses highlighting an important current research area or problem (contact the Editorial Office for details)
MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION
Submission of a manuscript to MEPS implies
(1) originality of the manuscript (i.e. the material has not been published before)
(2) exclusive submission to MEPS (i.e. it is not simultaneously submitted to any other publication outlet)
(3) approval by all immediately involved (e.g. authors, institutional authorities)
(4) correct listing of authors (i.e. all authors agree to be listed and have contributed to the research reported)
(5) compliance with institutional, national and international ethics guidelines concerning the use of animals in research and/or the sampling of endangered species
(6) agreement with Inter-Research terms of publication, including transfer of copyright to Inter-Research (for exceptions to this requirement see Copyright and Disclaimer) and the online posting of a prepress abstract
(7) agreement to pay the open access fees if one of the Open Access options is selected.
Make submissions via the 'Author gateway'. In case of any problem, the files may alternatively be emailed directly to the MEPS Editorial Office. Submit 2 files:
1. Cover letter including contact information for at least 3 potential reviewers and any relevant history of the manuscript (e.g. if the submission has previously been rejected by any journal)
2. Manuscript as single file including figures and tables
MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION
Please consult recent IR publications as a guide for details. You may also wish to consult a 'How to' book such as Day & Gastel (2011) How to write and publish a scientific paper, 7th edn (Greenwood Press, Westport, CT)
General: number manuscript pages and lines, use MS Word format, aim for <5 MB in size
Title: aim for a length of <100 characters
Running page head: provide a shortened title (3 to 6 words)
Authors and addresses: identify the corresponding author with an asterisk (*) and provide her/his email address; include zip or postal codes in all addresses, include present addresses if applicable.
Abstract: Maximum ca. 250 words
Key words: list 3 to 8 key words
In-line citation style: no comma before the year, 'et al.' in regular font, citations separated by comma, '&' instead of 'and' for citations with 2 authors. Examples: "... previously been shown (West & Amrose 1992, Smith et al. 2000, Johnston 2002)", "... as shown by West & Amrose (1992)..."
Archiving of data: authors are asked to deposit supporting molecular and phylogenetic data in a public database such as GenBank, TreeBASE or Dryad, and to give the accession number in the manuscript. The data must be accessible on the date of publication.
Presentation of data: figures, tables, and their captions should be self-explanatory; e.g. abbreviations and acronyms must be defined. For details, see Guidelines to Authors on Figure Preparation. Literature cited: see examples below. IR citation styles are available at www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp or download.
Periodicals: Penston MJ, Millar CP, Davies IM (2008) Reduced Lepeophtheirus salmonis larval abundance in a sea loch on the west coast of Scotland between 2002 and 2006. Dis Aquat Org 81:109-117
Books: Van der Schalie H (1973) Effects of temperature on growth and reproduction of aquatic snails. University of Michigan Library, Ann Arbor, MI
Book series: Hanski I (2005) The shrinking world: ecological consequences of habitat loss. In: Kinne O (ed) Excellence in ecology, Book 14. International Ecology Institute, Oldendorf/Luhe
Chapters/papers from books, proceedings, etc.: West TL, Amrose WG (1992) Abiotic and biotic effects on population dynamics of oligohaline benthic invertebrates. In: Colombo G, Ferrari I, Ceccherelli VU, Rossi R (eds) Marine eutrophication and population dynamics. Proc 25th Eur Mar Biol Symp. Olsen & Olsen, Fredensborg, p 189–194 Barnes RSK (1991) Reproduction, life histories and dispersal. In: Barnes RSK, Mann KH (eds) Fundamentals of aquatic ecology. Blackwell Science, Oxford, p 145–171
Dissertations: Eve TM (2001) Chemistry and chemical ecology of Indo-Pacific gorgonians. PhD dissertation, University of California, San Diego, CA
Websites: Froese F, Pauly D (2009) FishBase. www.fishbase.org (accessed 13 Jan 2012) |
Electronic supplements: material unsuitable for inclusion within the article (overlong tables, mathematical derivations, video clips, computer code, etc.) may be published on the Inter-Research web-site as an electronic supplement.
MANUSCRIPT PROCESSING
Manuscripts are evaluated by at least 3 reviewers. The Editor decides on acceptance, revision, or rejection. Manuscripts returned to authors for revision should be revised and resubmitted within 3 months; otherwise they may be considered as withdrawn.
Titles of accepted manuscripts are added to 'Forthcoming publications' on the IR website, together with a prepress abstract. Articles are published within 1 to 2 weeks after corrected proofs have been returned by the author(s). Copyright transfer and/or Licence to publish must be made on the form provided at the time of manuscript acceptance. Using this form, Open Access or Free Access may be ordered if desired. Offprints may be ordered on the form provided with the proof. For papers not published with Open Access, a watermarked pdf of the article will be emailed to the corresponding author shortly after publication. Offprints, if ordered, will be dispatched about 2 weeks after publication.
Editorial Board
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Otto Kinne
International Ecology Institute
Nordbünte 23 (+3, 5, 28, 30)
21385 Oldendorf/Luhe
Germany
Tel: +49 4132 7127
Fax: +49 4132 8883
Email: kinne(at)int-res.com
ASSOCIATE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Matthias Seaman (IR)
matthias(at)int-res.com
PRODUCTION EDITOR
John Austin (IR)
john(at)int-res.com
ASSISTANT EDITOR
Christine Paetzold (IR)
christine(at)int-res.com
Production Manager: Ian Stewart. Assistants to the Editors: Marita Bruns, Matthias Dirbach, Catherine Fesefeldt, Angela Fromm, Bernhard Fromm, Linda Froome-Döring, Ivor George, Sandra Hammer, Lutz Jahrmarkt, Konstantin Kambach, Lars Litwin, Justin Mellersh, Susan Mühlbauer, William Neel, Melanie Overbeck, Claire Pritchard, Simone Ritter, Heiko Scheibner, Florian Schlenker, Timothy St. Clair, Natalie Striepe, Nicole Taros, Simone Thiemann
Inter-Research (IR), Nordbünte 23 (+3, 5, 28, 30), 21385 Oldendorf/Luhe, Germany
Tel: +49 4132 7127, Fax: +49 4132 8883
Email: ir(at)int-res.com, Internet: www.int-res.com
All manuscripts (except Comments and Reply Comments) must pass through a rigorous review process involving at least 3 referees. For details consult Mar Ecol Prog Ser 279:1
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Contributing Editors are fully responsible for the review process of manuscripts allotted to them; they decide on acceptance or rejection of manuscripts handled by them.
Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi
lbenedetti(at)biologia.unipi.it
Dipartimento di Biologia, University of Pisa, Via A. Volta 6, 56126 Pisa, Italy
Ecology of rocky shores, impact assessment and environmental conservation, biodiversity, experimental design
Charles Birkeland
charlesb(at)hawaii.edu
Hawaii Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, USGS, 2538 The Mall, Edmondson Hall 165A, University of Hawaii at Monoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA
Coral-reef ecology; benthic ecology
Antonio M. Bode
antonio.bode(at)co.ieo.es
Centro Oceanografico de A Coruña, Apdo 130, 15080 A Coruña, Spain
Planktonic food webs and nitrogen cycles
Philippe Borsa
philippe.borsa(at)ird.fr
UR 227 - Biocomplexité des écosystèmes récifaux, IRD Centre de Montpellier - PS2, 911 avenue Agropolis, 34032 Montpellier cx, France
Population genetics, phylogeography, molecular systematics, fishes, mussels, DNA polymorphisms, PCR markers
Just Cebrian
jcebrian(at)disl.org
Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium, Dauphin Island Sea Laboratory, 101 Bienville Boulevard, Dauphin Island, Alabama 36528, USA
Coastal ecosystem ecology; trophic interactions; eutrophication; seagrass ecology
Yves Cherel
cherel(at)cebc.cnrs.fr
Directeur de Recherche, CEBC - CNRS, BP 14, 79360 Villiers-en-Bois, France
Food and feeding ecology of top marine predators; pelagic ecosystem of the Austral Ocean; stable isotopes
Peter J. Corkeron
peter.corkeron(at)noaa.gov
NOAA Fisheries, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, 166 Water Street, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA
Marine mammals; behaviour; bioacoustics; anthropogenic impacts
Jana Davis
jdavis(at)cbtrust.org
Associate Director for Programs, Chesapeake Bay Trust, 60 West St, Suite 405, Annapolis, Maryland 21401, USA
Coastal and estuarine ecology, population ecology, fisheries, and aquaculture
Omar Defeo
odefeo(at)dinara.gub.uy
Universidad de la República - Facultad de Ciencias, Marine Science Unit, Rambla O'Higgins 5319, Montevideo 11400, Uruguay
Coastal ecology, conservation, anthropogenic impacts; sandy beaches; fisheries
Edward G. Durbin
edurbin(at)gso.uri.edu
University of Rhode Island, Graduate School of Oceanography, South Ferry Road, Narragansett, Rhode Island 02882, USA
Zooplankton and fish ecology; food chain interactions
Peter J. Edmunds
peter.edmunds(at)csun.edu
Department of Biology, California State University, 18111 Nordhoff Street, Northridge, California 91330-8303, USA
Coral reefs: cnidarian ecophysiology; subtidal benthic ecology
Alejandro Gallego
a.gallego(at)marlab.ac.uk
Marine Laboratory Aberdeen, PO Box 101, Victoria Road, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, UK
Biological oceanography, bio-physical coupling, plankton ecology, modelling, ecology of fish early lifes stages
Jacob González-Solís
jgsolis(at)ub.edu
Dept. Biologia Animal (Vertebrates), Universitat de Barcelona, Av Diagonal 645, Barcelona 08028, Spain
Pelagic ecology, seabird conservation
Kenneth L. Heck Jr
kheck(at)disl.org
Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium, Dauphin Island Sea Laboratory, 101 Bienville Blvd, Dauphin Island,
Alabama 36528, USA
Benthic ecology, emphasis on seagrass ecosystems
Brian Helmuth
b.helmuth(at)neu.edu
Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences and School of Public Policy Director, Sustainability Science and Policy Initiative, Northeastern University, Marine Science Center, 430 Nahant Rd, Nahant, Massachusetts 01908, USA
Biomechanics; physiology; benthic and intertidal ecology; corals
Roger N. Hughes
r.n.hughes(at)bangor.ac.uk
School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Bangor, Gwynedd LL57 2UW, UK
Foraging behaviour; ecology of clonal and modular organisms
William M. Kemp
kemp(at)umces.edu
University of Maryland System, C E E S, Horn Point Environmental Laboratory, Cambridge, Maryland 21613, USA
Coastal ecosystem production and respiration, seagrass ecology, nitrogen cycling, eutrophication, hypoxia, mesocosm studies, and ecosystem modeling
Ronald P. Kiene
rkiene(at)disl.org
Dept of Marine Science, University of South Alabama, L S C B 25, Mobile, Alabama 36688, USA
Microbial ecology and the cycling of organic matter, sulfur, and nitrogen; DMSP and DMS cycling
Erik Kristensen
ebk(at)biology.sdu.dk
Institute of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, 5230 Odense M, Denmark
Sediment biogeochemistry; bioturbation; microbial ecology; mangrove ecology; ecology of marine benthos
Janet A. Ley
Janet.Ley(at)MyFWC.com
Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, 100 Eighth Avenue Southeast, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, USA
Fish community structure, mangrove ecosystems, marine protected areas, fisheries effects, trophic ecology
Romuald N. Lipcius
rom(at)vims.edu
Virginia Institute of Marine Science, The College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point, Virginia 23062, USA
Conservation biology; marine reserves; predation, metapopulation and source-sink dynamics; ecosystem-based management; restoration ecology; benthic invertebrate population dynamics; fisheries ecology; crustaceans; mollusks
Steven E. Lohrenz
slohrenz(at)umassd.edu
School for Marine Science and Technology, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, 706 South Rodney French Boulevard, New Bedford, Massachusetts 02744, USA
Phytoplankton ecology and physiology, nutrient and carbon biogeochemical cycling, aquatic optics
Tim McClanahan
tmcclanahan(at)wcs.org
Wildlife Conservation Society, PO Box 99470, Mombasa 80107, Kenya
Coral reef ecology, fisheries management, system ecology and modeling
James B. McClintock
mcclinto(at)uab.edu
Department of Biology, University of Alabama, 109 Campbell Hall, 1530 3rd Ave South, Birmingham,
Alabama 35294-1170, USA
Invertebrates: chemical ecology, reproduction and nutrition, larval ecology, polar ecology
Karen Miller
karen.miller(at)utas.edu.au
Institute of Antarctic and Southern Ocean Studies, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 77, Hobart, TAS 7001, Australia
Ecological genetics of invertebrates; coral ecology; larval ecology
Steven G. Morgan
sgmorgan(at)ucdavis.edu
Bodega Marine Laboratory, University of California, PO Box 247, 2099 Westside Road, Bodega Bay, California 94923, USA
Invertebrates: reproductive and larval ecology, life history and behavior; ecology of rocky shores
Toshi Nagata
nagata(at)aori.u-tokyo.ac.jp
Department of Chemical Oceanography, Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo,
5-1-5 Kashiwanoha, Kashiwa, Chiba 277-8564, Japan
Bacteria and heterotrophic flagellates, cycling of organic matter
Ivan Nagelkerken
ivan.nagelkerken(at)adelaide.edu.au
Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide SA 5005, Australia
Fish and climate change, sensory ecology, coral reef fish ecology, fish behavior, mangrove ecosystems, connectivity
Richard W. Osman
osmanr(at)si.edu
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, PO Box 28, 647 Contees Wharf Road, Edgewater, Maryland 21037, USA
Population and community ecology, larval recruitment, benthic invertebrates, and invasive species
Per J. Palsbøll
p.j.palsboll(at)rug.nl
Marine Evolution and Conservation, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen, 9747 AG Groningen, The Netherlands
Evolutionary, ecological, population and conservation genetics; marine mammals
Anna F. Pasternak
pasternakanna(at)hotmail.com
P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Nakhimovskii prospekt 36, 117 997 Moscow, Russia
Ecological physiology of zooplankton, life cycle strategies and diapause
Joseph R. Pawlik
pawlikj(at)uncw.edu
UNCW Center for Marine Science, 5001 Masonboro Loop Road, Wilmington, North Carolina 28409, USA
Marine chemical ecology of invertebrates; chemical induction of larval settlement; natural products
Morten F. Pedersen
mfp(at)ruc.dk
Department of Life Sciences and Chemistry 18.1, Roskilde University, PO Box 260, 4000 Roskilde, Denmark
Seagrass; macroalgae; eco-physiology; population dynamics including plant-herbivore interactions and competition; experimental design
Charles H. Peterson
cpeters(at)email.unc.edu
Institute of Marine Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 3407 Arendell Street, Morehead City,
North Carolina 28557, USA
Marine benthic ecology; population biology
Pei-Yuan Qian
boqianpy(at)ust.hk
Department of Biology, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong, SAR
Larval biology, biofilm, biofouling and antifouling, chemical ecology, molecular microbial ecology
Jake Rice
ricej(at)dfo-mpo.gc.ca
Canadian Science Advisory Secretariat, Fisheries & Oceans, 200 Kent Street, Stn 12S015, Ottawa, ON K1A OE6, Canada
Science policy; management of marine resources; ecosystem effects of human activities
Katherine Richardson
kari(at)science.ku.dk
Department of Biology, Ecology and Evolution, University of Copenhagen, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
Phytoplankton: distributions, blooms, hydrographic features, chlorophyll, stratification, adaptations, primary production
Graham Savidge
g.savidge(at)qub.ac.uk
The Queen's University of Belfast, Marine Biology Station, The Strand, Portaferry, Co. Down, Northern Ireland, UK
Phytoplankton ecology; primary production; photosynthesis
Scott A. Shaffer
scott.shaffer(at)sjsu.edu
San Jose State University, Department of Biological Sciences, One Washington Square, San Jose, California 95192-0100, USA
Seabird foraging ecology and energetics, electronic tagging, and habitat use
Kenneth Sherman
kenneth.sherman(at)noaa.gov
NOAA Fisheries, Northeast Fisheries Center, 28 Tarzwell Dr, Narragansett, Rhode Island 02882, USA
Fisheries ecology; fishery resources; zooplankton
Paul Snelgrove
psnelgro(at)mun.ca
Canada Research Chair in Boreal & Cold Ocean Systems, Ocean Sciences Centre, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, NL A1C 5S7, Canada
Marine community ecology; larval ecology of fish and benthic invertebrates; biodiversity; hydrodynamic effects on benthic communities and populations, deep-sea ecology, disturbance and anthropogenic impacts
Inna M. Sokolova
isokolov(at)uncc.edu
Biology Department, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Blvd, Charlotte,
North Carolina 28223-001, USA
Ecological physiology of invertebrates and effects of pollutants
Martin Solan
m.solan(at)soton.ac.uk
University of Southampton, Waterfront Campus, European Way, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK
Biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, benthic ecology, bioturbation
Stylianos Somarakis
somarak(at)her.hcmr.gr
Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Institute of Marine Biological Resources, P.O. Box 2214, 71003 Heraklion,
Crete, Greece
Marine fisheries ecology: reproduction and early life history of fishes, small pelagic fishes; Mediterranean ecosystems
Robert Stead
stead(at)ulagos.cl
Centro i-mar, Universidad de Los Lagos, Camino Chinquihue Km 6, Casilla 557, Puerto Montt, Chile
Soft bottom meio- and macrofauna; population and community ecology
Peter D. Steinberg
P.Steinberg(at)unsw.edu.au
School of Biological, Earth, and Environmental Science, Centre for Marine Biofouling and Bio-innovation, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
Marine chemical ecology; fouling, antifouling and colonisation biology; bacterial biofilms; herbviory; seaweed ecology; prokaryote/eukaryote interaction
Konstantinos I. Stergiou
kstergio(at)bio.auth.gr
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, School of Biology, Departrment of Zoology, PO Box 34, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece
Fish population dynamics, distribution and the impacts of fishing on populations. Mediterranean fisheries; fish biogeography and climate change
Nick Tolimieri
Nick.Tolimieri(at)noaa.gov
NOAA Fisheries, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, 2725 Montlake Blvd E, Seattle, Washington 98112, USA
Fish ecology: population dynamics, larvae and recruitment, competition, predation; regime shifts; statistics and experimental design
Antony J. Underwood
aju(at)bio.usyd.edu.au
Centre for Research on Ecological Impacts of Coastal Cities, Marine Ecological Laboratory A11, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
Experimental intertidal and subtidal ecology; behavior; life cycles of sessile invertebrates
Rory P. Wilson
R.P.Wilson(at)swansea.ac.uk
School of Biological Sciences, Swansea University, Singleton Park, Swansea SA2 8PP, UK
Role of seabirds in the marine environment: ecology, behaviour, distribution, foraging; recording systems attached to birds
Marsh Youngbluth
youngbluth(at)hboi.edu
Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution, 5600 U.S. 1 North, Fort Pierce, Florida 34946, USA
Biological oceanography with special emphasis on zooplankton ecology and behavior
REVIEW EDITORS
Review Editors critically assess the scientific value of manuscripts, and may advise authors in matters of manuscript presentation.
David G. Ainley
Los Gatos, California, USA
Top levels of marine food webs, marine ornithology, marine mammalogy
Laura Airoldi
Ravenna, Italy
Ecology of rocky coasts; macroalgae; disturbance, invasive species, biodiversity and conservation
A. C. Anil
Dona Paula, Goa, India
Biofouling, invertebrate larvae, phytoplankton ecology, coastal ecosystems
Philippe Archambault
Rimouski, QC, Canada
Benthic and rocky shore ecology; biodiversity; aquaculture–environment interactions
William S. Arnold
St. Petersburg, Florida, USA
Molluscan fisheries and ecology; larval dispersal and recruitment; marine population restoration
Karl Banse
Seattle, Washington, USA
Biological oceanography; plankton research
Gary T. Banta
Roskilde, Denmark
Benthic ecology and ecotoxicology, animal-sediment relations, bioturbation, biogeochemical cycling, experimental design
Mario Barletta
Recife, Brazil
Tropical and subtropical estuarine and coastal habitats, connectivity, fish ecology, environmental impacts
Peter G. Beninger
Nantes, France
Bivalve feeding; reproduction
Marthán N. Bester
Hatfield, South Africa
Pinniped population ecology, seal feeding ecology, dispersal & dispersion, functional morphology, body growth, seal-seabird interactions, killer whale population ecology, white shark behavioural ecology
Patricia Bonin
Marseille, France
Structure and diversity of marine microbial communities; nitrogen cycle
Erik Bonsdorff
Turku/Åbo, Finland
Coastal, estuarine and brackish benthic ecosystems: experimentation; biodiversity; environmental impacts
Barbara E. Brown
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, United Kingdom
Effects of anthropogenic and natural disturbances on coral reefs
Jeffrey A. Buckel
Morehead City, North Carolina, USA
Fisheries ecology, predator-prey interactions, estimating vital rates
Ronald S. Burton
La Jolla, California, USA
Population genetics; evolutionary mechanisms in populations; biochemical and molecular genetic analyses of invertebrates
Michael Castellini
Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
Marine mammals and birds: physiology of diving and feeding
Juan Carlos Castilla
Santiago, Chile
Rocky shore ecology and anthropogenic impacts; coastal management and conservation; shellfish and invertebrate predators
Nanette Chadwick
Auburn, Alabama, USA
Fouling communities, reef-building corals, sea anemones, tunicates, symbioses, competition, population dynamics, behavior
Margaret G. Chapman
Sydney, Australia
Intertidal ecology, experimental design, impact assessment, restoration, mangroves, benthic ecology, urbanization, biodiversity
John H. Choat
john.choat(at)jcu.edu.au
Townsville, Australia
Reef ecology, fish ecology and evolution, coral reefs
Yves Collos
Montpellier, France
Nitrogen metabolism of phytoplankton
Sean D. Connell
Adelaide, SA, Australia
Macroecology; landscape ecology of urban habitats; disturbance; kelp forests
Richard F. Dame
Conway, South Carolina, USA
Bivalve physiological ecology; estuarine and shallow marine ecosystems; reefs (bivalve, coral, worm, etc); ecosystem analysis and complexity
Steve Dawson
Dunedin, New Zealand
Conservation Biology, behaviour, abundance assessment and acoustics of marine mammals, especially cetaceans
Don Deibel
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Zooplankton ecology and nutrition, gelatinous organisms: ecology and physiology
Victor N. de Jonge
Hull, UK
Estuarine and coastal processes; algae and vascular plants; eutrophication; nutrient chemistry; effects of global change; conservation, restoration and management of coasts and estuaries
Rutger de Wit
Montpelllier, France
Benthic microbial ecology; eutrophication and biogeochemical cycling; ecophysiological modelling of microorganisms
Ana I. Dittel
Lewes, Delaware, USA
Larval ecology of invertebrates
Sergey Dobretsov
Muscat, Oman
Chemical ecology of invertebrates, microbiology, and biofouling; larval settlement, epibiotic and biofouling communities
Quay Dortch
Silver Spring, Maryland, USA
Phytoplankton: physiological ecology; nutrient dynamics, eutrophication, harmful algal blooms
Daniel E. Duplisea
Mont-Joli, Québec, Canada
System level analyses
Anastasios Eleftheriou
Heraklion, Greece
Benthos ecology, environmental impacts
Mike Elliott
Hull, UK
Structure and function of fish and benthic communities
Charles E. Epifanio
Lewes, Delaware, USA
Early life history of fish and invertebrate larvae
Robert J. Feller
Columbia, South Carolina, USA
Trophic dynamics and energetics of crustacea and fishes, meiofauna ecology, ecological immunoassays, salt marsh ecology
Tom Fenchel
Helsingør, Denmark
Population biology; microbial ecology
Jonathan A. D. Fisher
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Fisheries ecology and conservation, intertidal and community ecology
Nicholas S. Fisher
Stony Brook, New York, USA
Physiological ecology of phytoplankton
Peter Fong
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, USA
Invertebrates; rocky intertidal; mud flat ecology; reproduction; neurophysiology
Rodney M. Forster
Lowestoft, Suffolk, UK
Aquatic primary production; microphytobenthos; remote sensing of the coastal zone; effects of UV radiation
Ken Furuya
Tokyo, Japan
Phytoplankton ecology; community structure; dynamics
José A. Garcia Charton
Murcia, Spain
Reef fish ecology and conservation; marine protected areas; environmental impact assessment; experimental design.
Brendan J. Godley
Penryn, United Kingdom
Marine Turtle Biology: ecology, behaviour, distribution, status and conservation; particularly interested in satellite tracking
Jaime Gómez-Gutiérrez
La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico
Zooplankton and nekton ecology, emphasis on krill and copepod secondary production, parasitology and behavior
David Grémillet
Montpellier, France
Biotelemetry and ecophysiology; seabird behavior, energetics and evolution; effects of climate, pollution and fisheries
Benni Winding Hansen
Roskilde, Denmark
Laboratory and in situ studies on zooplankton; secondary production (grazing, growth, energetics, feeding behaviour)
Per Juel Hansen
Helsingør, Denmark
Protist and phytoplankton ecology
Brian Hentschel
San Diego, California, USA
Benthic ecology, larval ecology, deposit feeding, suspension feeding, organism-flow interactions, salt-marsh ecology
Nicola Hillgruber
Juneau, Alaska, USA
Fish ecology; trophic interactions
Eric R. Holm
West Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Larval settlement and metamorphosis, fouling communities, biofouling adhesion
Masahiro Horinouchi
Shimane, Japan
Seagrass fish assemblages
Kevin Hovel
San Diego, California, USA
Coastal landscape ecology, predator-prey interactions, marine invertebrates
Cindy Hull
Hobart, TAS, Australia
Foraging and breeding in seabirds, satellite telemetry
George L. Hunt
Seattle, Washington, USA
Seabirds; marine mammals; their roles in carbon fluxes
Catriona Hurd
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Seaweed nutrient physiology and ecology; hydrodynamics and biomechanics
David Hyrenbach
Waimanalo, Hawaii, USA
Marine bird and mammal biogeography, habitats and conservation
Adrianna Ianora
Napels, Italy
Zooplankton ecophysiology, reproduction and development; chemical ecology of phytoplankton-zooplankton interactions
Sigrun H. Jónasdóttir
Charlottenlund, Denmark
Zooplankton feeding and population dynamics
Raphael M. Kudela
Santa Cruz, CA, USA
Phytoplankton ecology and physiology, harmful algal blooms, bio-optics and remote sensing
Michael R. Landry
La Jolla, California, USA
Food web interactions; zooplankton ecology
Jean-Sébastien Lauzon-Guay
Mont-Joli, Quebec, Canada
Population dynamics of benthic species; mathematical modeling; fisheries and aquaculture
Hunter S. Lenihan
Santa Barbara, California, USA
Marine benthic ecology (temperate and coral reefs, estuaries, soft bottoms, polar environments); fisheries ecology; ecotoxicology
Samuel N. Luoma
Menlo Park, California, USA
Feeding ecology of deposit feeders; geochemistry of trace elements in sediments
Mark Meekan
Casuarina, Darwin, Australia
Ecology of fish larvae, sharks, and coral reefs
Zhi-Ping Mei
Guangdong, PR China
Marine primary production, phytoplankton ecology, marine planktonic ecosystem model
Thomas J. Minello
Galveston, Texas, USA
Estuarine ecology; habitat functions for nekton and benthic organisms; behavior and biology of penaeid shrimps and blue crabs
Gilles Miron
Moncton, Nouveau-Brunswick, Canada
Benthic ecology, recruitment and settlement processes, ecoethology
Peter J. Mumby
Exeter, United Kingdom
Multivariate statistical analysis; coral bleaching; marine protected areas, coastal reef ecology; reef fish behaviour; fish population dynamics
Takeshi Naganuma
Higashi-hiroshima, Japan
Microbial biogeography
Richard D. M. Nash
Bergen, Norway
Fish biology, population dynamics, fisheries management
Helen Neil
Wellington, New Zealand
Marine geology; paleoceanography; paleoclimate; isotope geochemistry (esp. otoliths)
Thomas Noji
Highlands, New Jersey, USA
Ecosystem processes, zooplankton ecology
Emil Ólafsson
Palma, Spain
Benthic ecology: energy flow and food webs, impact assessments, meiofauna
Claire Paris
Miami, Florida, USA
Biological oceanography: biophysical modeling; ichthyoplankton and recruitment
Myron A. Peck
Hamburg, Germany
Ecology of fish early life stages, copepod vital rates, ecophysiology, individual based modelling of invertebrates and fishes
Paulette Peckol
Northampton, Massachusetts, USA
Algal physiology, nutrients and photosynthesis, population interactions; effects of disturbance on coral reefs and reef fishes
Peter Petraitis
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Field experimental design, community ecology of rocky shores
John F. Piatt
Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Marine birds and mammals; feeding ecology; seabird population dynamics; marine food webs; oil pollution; fishery interactions
Stéphane Plourde
Mont-Joli, Québec, Canada
Zooplankton dynamics and secondary production, biological-physical models
Roberto Pronzato
Genova, Italy
Benthos population dynamics
Peter Ralph
Sydney, NSW, Australia
Chlorophyll a fluorescence; coral bleaching; sea ice photosynhtesis; toxicology - algal; macroalgal physiology; seagrass physiology
Courtney E. Richmond
Glassboro, New Jersey, USA
Ecological impacts of environmental stress; population dynamics; ecological modelling; life history strategies
Hans Ulrik Riisgård
Kerteminde, Denmark
Environmental effects, bioenergetics and filter-feeding in macroinvertebrates
Michael J. Risk
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Coral reef ecology; soft bottom ecology; coastal processes
Lawrence P. Rozas
Lafayette, Louisiana, USA
Estuarine ecology, habitat restoration; decapod crustaceans and fishes
Benjamin Ruttenberg
Miami, Florida, USA
Reef fishes: life history, recruitment, biogeography; marine reserves
Jarrod A. Santora
Petaluma, California, USA
David R. Schiel
Christchurch, New Zealand
Experimental marine ecology; marine plant/herbivore interactions; demography and ecology of algae; invertebrate fisheries; aquaculture
J. Malcolm Shick
Orono, Maine, USA
Marine physiological ecology: oxygen toxicity and UV radiation stress in symbiotic invertebrates
Antonio Sole-Cava
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Invertebrate population genetics, cryptic speciation, sea anemone taxonomy; reproduction; benthic intertidal ecology; invertebrate fisheries
Erik Sotka
Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Molecular ecology, chemical ecology, and the evolution of biotic interactions
Kerrie Swadling
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Zooplankton; sea ice ecology; food web dynamics
Kam W. Tang
Gloucester Point, VA, USA
Planktonic and microbial processes
Guglielmo Tita
Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Québec, Canada G4T 5L9
Benthic ecology, meiofauna, environmental impact of aquaculture
Dianne Tracey
Hataitai, Wellington, New Zealand
Deep-sea corals and deep-sea fisheries; biodiversity; seamount research
John F. Valentine
Dauphin Island, Alabama, USA
Biotic processes and flow of energy among trophic levels; seagrass food webs
Kay C. Vopel
Auckland, New Zealand
Benthic ecology, animal-sediment interactions, sediment-seawater solute
exchange, bioturbation, effects of aquaculture on benthic ecosystems
Stephen Votier
Plymouth, UK
Seabird population dynamics, climate effects
Wen-Xiong Wang
Kowloon, Hong Kong, SAR
Marine pollution and ecotoxicology; biogeochemistry of trace elements; physiological ecology of marine invertebrates; trophic interaction
Mark E. Warner
Lewes, Delaware, USA
Physiological ecology of reef building corals; photosynthesis and photoinhibition
Paula E. Whitfield
Beaufort, North Carolina, USA
Invasion ecology and biology; climate change effects in marine communities
Stephen Wing
Dunedin, New Zealand
Food web structure, metapopulation ecology, marine protected areas, fisheries
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