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
Now celebrating a centenary of publication, New Phytologist continues to publish high-quality, wide-ranging original research on all aspects of plant science. Falling within three sections - Function, Environment and Interaction - articles cover topics from intracellular processes to global environmental change.
|
Submissions describing original research on all aspects of plant science are welcomed. Letters, commentary and opinion are encouraged in the Forum section and regular Special Issues highlight key areas of current research. |

|
Instructions to Authors
New Phytologist is an international electronic/print journal owned by a non-profit-making charitable trust dedicated to the promotion of plant science. Regular submissions describing original research on all aspects of plant science are welcomed. Short Letters and other submissions to the Forum section, as well as Research reviews, Rapid reports and Methods papers, are encouraged. Other Forum articles, as well as Tansley reviews and Book reviews, are commissioned. 100 free offprints will be provided for each article, and colour costs will also be paid for by the journal. If you have any queries do not hesitate to get in touch with Central Office or, if it is more convenient, our USA Office.
Central Office
Editorial & Development Manager Jonathan Ingram
Deputy Editorial & Development Manager Holly Slater
Development Nichola J. Hetherington
Administration Elizabeth J. Eyes, Helen M Hitchings
New Phytologist Central Office Bailrigg House Lancaster University Lancaster LA1 4YE UK Tel: +44 1524 594691 Fax: +44 1524 594696 newphytol@lancaster.ac.uk
USA Office
Richard J. Norby
New Phytologist USA Office Oak Ridge National Laboratory Bldg 1062, PO Box 2008 Bethel Valley Road Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6422 USA Tel: 865 576 5261 Fax: 865 576 9939 newphytol@ornl.gov
The USA Office provides a local North American contact point for queries, if needed, and makes communication faster and more efficient. Both offices are in daily communication, which includes shared database access and express mail contact.
Internet
Visit www.newphytologist.com to read summaries of New Phytologist articles online and register for ToC alerts (free of charge). All online subscribers receive access to the fully navigable online version. The most up-to-date information about the journal is also available.
Submission and the editorial process
To submit online to New Phytologist please click on the Submit Online button from the menu on this page. If you have technical difficulties completing online submission please make use of support via the Get Help Now button available on the submission site. Alternatively you may send your manuscript to New Phytologist in the usual way and the journal staff will deal with the submission. Provide a single hardcopy and an electronic version on disk. Send this to the Managing Editor at Central Office or to the USA Office (using the local office will not alter the treatment of your paper in scientific or editorial terms). You are encouraged to nominate up to six potential referees. The journal will get in touch after receipt and when the manuscript has been assessed.
Proofs will be sent via email as a PDF file and should be returned to the production editor within 3 days by express mail or fax. During this process, copyright forms will need to be signed, and further offprints may be ordered. Get in touch with Central Office - or the USA Office - if you have queries at any stage.
A Copyright Assignment Form must be completed for all articles accepted for publication in the journal. This form is also available as a Word document.
A File Description Form must be completed for all electronic submission of manuscripts.
Categories of article
These Instructions to authors centre on regular manuscripts. In these, original research on all aspects of plant science is welcome, but for guidance this breaks down as follows:
- Function - intracellular processes, differentiation and signalling, and the whole plant.
- Environment - ecophysiology, global change and pollution, molecular divergence, and gene flow.
- Interaction - multitrophic systems, mycorrhizas and pathogens, and nitrogen-fixing symbioses.
New Phytologist also accepts other categories of article. Do refer to recent issues of the journal for guidance on the types of format that are acceptable. Generally, Letters are the most free-ranging - all submissions of this type will be considered. Typically, short Research reviews will be in the range 3000-4000 words, with up to 40 references and six figures. Following a short introduction putting the area into context, and providing a way in for the non-specialist, these will concentrate on the most recent developments in the field. Rapid reports differ from regular manuscripts in that the nature of the findings makes priority publication of particular scientific importance, and a covering letter must state clearly why this is considered to be the case. They will be shorter than usual, with a guideline maximum of no more than four figures and/or tables; in any case, they must not occupy more than 4-6 pages in the printed journal. Attention to both the requirements of the Instructions to authors 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. Methods papers should still typically focus, as with any other submission, on timely research that gives insights into broad principles of plant biology. 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. Especially novel methods-only papers, either evaluating a new method/analytical approach or examining existing practice, will also occasionally be accepted, where the contribution is of wide interest to plant scientists.
New Phytologist Online Submission
New Phytologist is using Manuscript CentralTM for online submission For online submission of your manuscript to the New Phytologist, first prepare your manuscript in the usual way, following these Instructions to authors. Next, compile the electronic version of the manuscript for peer review as detailed below. Finally, enter the online submission site following the instructions on the log in screen. Enter the Author Centre and click on Submit First Draft of a New Manuscript. Follow the on screen instructions to enter the manuscript data requested (including the Cover Letter) and finally upload the manuscript. If you break off at any point in the process you can come back to your partial submission at a later date in your Author Centre. Everything is saved automatically as you proceed selecting Save and Continue. To compile the electronic version of the manuscript for peer review, prepare a single document, with the text/tables of your manuscript plus embedded figures, saved as a Word document (.doc), PDF, RTF or PS file. This will be converted to PDF format during uploading. Do make sure that you have only used standard fonts (e.g. Times New Roman for text, Symbol for additional characters) in the main text. If you have difficulties creating this single document, you will simply need to upload each component of the manuscript (text/tables, each figure) separately.
Image files for figures, such as GIF, JPEG, EPS and TIFF, may be uploaded separately in any case if, when embedded within the single document, the resolution appears to be insufficient. These will be converted to small JPEG files. You may upload other file types such as Excel spreadsheets, LaTeX files, QuickTime movies, PowerPoint presentations or other image types, but Manuscript Central will not convert these. Journal staff and referees will not necessarily be able to view these unconverted files. Make a note in your Cover Letter. If you are unable to produce an electronic version of any part of your manuscript, then please simply note this in your Cover Letter when you submit to Manuscript Central and send the material as a high quality hardcopy to the journal. Note that Manuscript Central is principally to enable efficient peer review. A production quality hardcopy and a full electronic version of the manuscript will also be requested after acceptance for production purposes.
Regular manuscripts
These should be prepared double-spaced with settings for letter (8.5 x 11 inch) or A4 (210 x 297 mm) paper with wide margins. Use Times New Roman font, pt-size 12. Lines and pages should be numbered. Both American and British English are acceptable. Include, on the first page of the manuscript, a concise and informative title (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, fax and email details. Arrange papers under the headings Summary, Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Acknowledgements and References.
The Results and Discussion can be combined if this appears more logical. The Summary, which must be usable as a stand-alone document, must not exceed 175 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. Five to eight key words must be given at the end of the Summary to enable efficient searching online; words that are in the title can, and should, be included among these. Very short phrases and scientific names with their common equivalents (e.g. Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco)) are acceptable.
The Materials and Methods section should allow replication of all experiments described and demonstrate the validity of those experiments for the research being conducted. Please be as concise as possible consistent with an appropriate level of explanation for the science presented, with the Discussion not exceeding 20% of the number of pages. Most papers should not exceed 8-10 pages in the printed journal.
Tables and figures
- Tables These must be self-explanatory and each presented on a separate page outside the text, but as part of the same document. Following a concise, informative heading, each table should be fully understandable either through column headings or, if these are insufficient in themselves, through a footnote.
- Diagrams, graphs and photographs Refer to as figures and prepare each as a separate document. High-quality hardcopies will only usually be requested at the production stage. 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. The scale marks on graphs should be inside the axes. 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 of the legend, because this is the text that will be immediately visible, with the figure thumbnail, to readers online. The rest of 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. Any hardcopies of artwork will not usually be returned, unless specifically requested.
- Electronic artwork We would like to receive your artwork in electronic form. Please save vector graphics (e.g. line artwork) in EPS format, and bitmap files (e.g. half-tones) in TIFF format. Ideally, vector graphics that have been saved in metafile (.WWF) or pict (.PCT) format should be embedded within the body of the text file. Detailed information on our digital illustration standards is available at
www.blackwell-science.com/elecmed/authors.htm.
References
In citations in the text, include all the author names only for single- and two-author papers (e.g. Thomas & Ahlers, 1999; Singsaas, 2001). For citations of papers with three or more authors, give only the first name (e.g. Schmeltzer et al., 2002). Where different references would appear identical when cited in this manner, use letters after the date (e.g. 2001a,b) in the citations and in the reference list. Alternatively, if this problem arises because two authors have the same last name, add their initials. Order lists of references in the text in date order, and alphabetically when of the same date. Use an ampersand (&) for and in references in the text. At the end of the text, list references alphabetically using the following standard forms:
Morris PC. 2001. MAP kinase signal transduction pathways in plants. New Phytologist 151: 67-89.
Schultz A. 2000. Fine root architecture of Arabidopsis under the influence of increased CO2 concentration. PhD thesis, University of Köln, Germany.
Young MW, Kay SA. 2001. Time zones: a comparative genetics of circadian clocks. Nature Reviews Genetics 2: 702-716.
Sabbagh K. 1999. A rum affair. London, UK: The Penguin Press.
Rodermel B. 2001. Pathways of plastid-to-nucleus signaling. Trends in Plant Science 6: 471-478.
Thiel T, Lyons EM, Thielmeier J. 1999. Organization and regulation of two clusters of nif genes in the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis. In: Peschek GA, Löffelhardt W, Schmetterer G, eds. The phototrophic prokaryotes. New York, USA: Kluwer/Plenum, 517-521.
Cite references in press only if accepted by a named journal. All other references - including submitted papers and abstracts - must be cited in the text as unpublished (e.g. G. Jehel, unpublished) and should not be included in the reference list. 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.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material, such as data sets or additional figures or tables, that will not be published in the print edition of the journal, but which will be viewable via the online edition, can be submitted. 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 Web site, to which links will be set up from www.newphytologist.com. The author must advise Blackwell Publishing if the URL of such a Web site changes. The availability of Supplementary material should be indicated in the main manuscript by a paragraph, to appear after the references, headed Supplementary material and providing details. The material should be submitted in final form, ready for viewing, or alternatively, if the size or format is such that it cannot be submitted, the author should make the material available for viewing in final form via the Web by the Editors and by reviewers. No changes can be made subsequently. This Supplementary material is considered an integral part of the article and will be reviewed accordingly.
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. Where there are more than five such abbreviations, they should be grouped into an abbreviations list for use as a footnote at the beginning of the paper. Avoid abbreviations if possible in the title, headings and Summary. Standard abbreviations include such terms as the metabolites ATP, NADP and OAA; buffers such as Hepes and Mes; growth regulators such as ABA and IAA; and statistical terms such as SD and ANOVA. There follows a short list of preferred abbreviations, where more than one standard abbreviation is in common usage or there could be confusion as to whether or not an abbreviation is desirable.
Preferred abbreviations A Absorbance C3 plant Plant with C3 metabolism (also C4 plant) Chl Chlorophyll (also Chla, Chlb) d. wt Dry weight Fig. (Figs) Figure f. wt Fresh weight g Acceleration due to gravity (not rpm) GA, GA1 Gibberellin, gibberellin A1 GA3 Gibberellic acid Loge Natural logarithm (not Ln) n Number of replicates ns Not significant P Probability Pr/Pfr Far-red/red light-absorbing form of phytochrome Pi Inorganic orthophosphate sp. (spp.) Species ssp. Subspecies var. Variety
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 nevertheless be used; when such a name is first mentioned, the old name should be given in parentheses (e.g. Pulsatilla vulgaris (formerly Anemone pulsatilla)).
Provenances
Give the provenance (manufacturer, city, state, country) for specific items of equipment in the Materials and Methods section. Numbers Spell out numbers up to and including nine except when used with units (e.g. two trees, seven species, but 3 mg, 5 mm3). Give numbers from 10 upwards as figures.
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, t, r, r2.
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 whenever possible 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 x10-5 = 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. 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.
Concentration. As for volume, units based either on the litre or on the cubic metre will be accepted, as well as units such as µM, mM and M. One system only must be used throughout a paper.
Light. In general, use units based on energy for heat or energy balance; use 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).
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).
New Phytologist is covered by Blackwell Publishing's OnlineEarly service. OnlineEarly articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. OnlineEarly articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and authors' final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of OnlineEarly articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so OnlineEarly articles cannot be cited in the traditional way. They are therefore given a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which allows the article to be cited and tracked before it is allocated to an issue. After print publication, the DOI remains valid and can continue to be used to cite and access the article.
Legal requirements
Submissions must not have been published in, or accepted for publication by, any other journal.
The policy of the New Phytologist Trust is to acquire copyright for all contributions. 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. Where copyright is held by the contributors 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. For further information, copyright transfer forms are available at www.newphytologist.com Please click here for the Indemnity Form.
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief F. Ian Woodward Department of Animal and Plant Sciences University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN UK Tel: + 44 114 222 4374 Fax: + 44 114 222 0002 f.i.woodward@sheffield.ac.uk
Section Editors
Function Alistair M Hetherington, Department of Biology, IENS, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YQ, UK Tel: + 44 1524 594212 Fax: + 44 1524 843854 a.hetherington@lancaster.ac.uk
Environment Richard J. Norby, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Building 1062, PO Box 2008, Bethel Valley Road, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6422, USA Tel: + 1 865 576 5261 Fax: + 1 865 576 9939 rjn@ornl.gov
Interaction Francis Martin, Equipe de Microbiologie Forestière, INRA-Nancy, 54280 Champenoux, France Tel: + 33 383 39 40 80 Fax: + 33 383 39 40 69 fmartin@nancy.inra.fr
Evolution Mark D Rausher, Duke University, Department of Biology, Durham, North Carolina, NC 27708-0338, USA Tel: +1 919 684 2295 Fax: +1 919 660 7293 mrausher@duke.edu
Tansley Review Editor Alistair M Hetherington, Department of Biology, IENS, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YQ, UK Tel: + 44 1524 594212 Fax: + 44 1524 843854 a.hetherington@lancaster.ac.uk
Book Review Editor Jonathan Ingram, New Phytologist Central Office, Bailrigg House, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YE, UK Tel: + 44 1524 594691 Fax: + 44 1524 594696 j.ingram@lancaster.ac.uk
Central Office
Editorial & Development Manager Jonathan Ingram, New Phytologist Central Office, Bailrigg House, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YE, UK Tel: + 44 1524 594691 Fax: + 44 1524 594696 j.ingram@lancaster.ac.uk
Deputy Editorial & Development Manager Holly Slater h.slater@lancaster.ac.uk
Administration New Phytologist Central Office, Bailrigg House, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YE, UK Tel: +1 44 1524 594691 Fax: +1 44 1524 594696 newphytol@lancaster.ac.uk
USA Office
Richard J. Norby, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Building 1062, PO Box 2008, Bethel Valley Road, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6422, USA Tel: + 1 865 576 5261 Fax: + 1 865 576 9939 rjn@ornl.gov
Editors
Ian J. Alexander, Department of Plant & Soil Science, University of Aberdeen, Cruickshank Building, Aberdeen, AB24 3UU, UK Tel: + 44 1224 272697/272692 Fax: + 44 1224 272703 i.alexander@abdn.ac.uk
Chris Cobbett, Department of Genetics, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia Tel: +61 3 8344 5138/6273 Fax: +61 3 8344 5139 ccobbett@unimelb.edu.au
Peter S. Curtis, Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology, The Ohio State University, 1735 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1293, USA Tel: + 1 614 292 0835 Fax: +1 614 292 2030 curtis.7@osu.edu
Jeff G. Duckett, School of Biological Sciences, Queen Mary and Westfield College, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS, UK Tel: + 44 171 775 3294 Fax: + 44 181 983 0973 j.g.duckett@qmw.ac.uk
Alastair H. Fitter, Department of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, York, YO1 5YW, UK Tel: + 44 1904 432 814 Fax: + 44 1904 434 385 ahf1@york.ac.uk
John R. Gallon, School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Swansea, Singleton Park, Swansea, SA2 8PP, UK Tel: + 44 1792 295 376 Fax: + 44 1792 295 447 j.r.gallon@swansea.ac.uk
Eric Garnier, Centre dEcologie Fonctionnelle & Evolutive (CNRS), 1919 Route de Mende, 34293 Montpellier, Cedex 5, France Tel: + 33 467 61 32 42 Fax: + 33 467 41 21 38 garnier@cefe.cnrs-mop.fr
Maria J. Harrison, The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, 2510 Sam Noble Parkway, Ardmore, OK 73401, USA Tel: + 1 580 223 5810 Fax: + 1 580 221 7380 mjharrison@noble.org
Prof. Keith Lindsey, The Integrative Cell Biology Laboratory, School of Biological & Biomedical Sciences, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK Tel: +44 191 374 7059 Fax: +44 191 374 2417 keith.lindsey@durham.ac.uk
Loren Rieseberg, Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA Tel: + 1 812 855 7614 Fax: + 1 812 855 6705 lriesebe@bio.indiana.edu
Steven H Strauss, Forest Science, Oregon State University, 321 Richardson Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331-5752, USA Tel: +1 541 737 6578 Fax: +1 541 737 1393 steve.strauss@orst.edu
Sonia E Sultan, Department of Biology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459-0170, USA Tel: +1 860 685 3493 Fax: +1 860 685 3279 sesultan@wesleyan.edu
Nicholas J. Talbot, School of Biological Sciences, University of Exeter, Washington Singer Laboratories, Perry Road, Exeter, EX4 4QG, UK Tel: + 44 1392 264 673 Fax: + 44 1392 264 668 n.j.talbot@exeter.ac.uk
Board of Advisors
C.P. Andersen, US EPA, Corvallis, OR, USA J.B. Anderson, Toronto, Canada W. Armstrong, Hull, UK A.E. Ashford, New South Wales, Australia A. Austin, Buenos Aires, Argentina A.J.M. Baker, Melbourne, Australia D.J. Beerling, Sheffield, UK B. Bergman, Stockholm, Sweden P. Bonfante, Torino, Italy B. Botton, H. Poincar? Nancy, France J.W.G. Cairney, Western Sydney, Australia M.M. Campbell, Oxford, UK M. Chalot, Nancy, France A.H. Chappelka, Auburn, AL, USA S. Crafts-Brandner, Western Cotton Research Laboratory, AZ, USA B. Dell, Murdoch, Perth, Australia D.M. Eissenstat, Penn. SU, PA, USA J.H. Graham, Lake Alfred, FL, USA Julie Gray, Sheffield, UK M.W. Humphreys, IGER, UK I. Jakobsen, Riso Nat. Lab., Roskilde, Denmark J.W. Kadereit, JGU, Mainz, Germany R.T. Koide, Penn State, PA, USA U. Kraemer, Potsdam, Germany P.W. Lane, Smith Kline Beecham, Harlow, UK J.A. Laurence, Cornell, NY, USA J. Leake, Sheffield, UK R. Lumaret, CNRS, Montpellier, France M.R. Macnair, Exeter, UK S.P. McGrath, Rothamsted, UK P. Meerts, ULB, Bruxelles, Belgium Guy Midgely, Cape Town, South Africa B. Müller-Röber, Max Planck Institute, Golm, Germany R. Munns, CSIRO, Canberra, Australia G. Podila, University of Alabama, AL, USA C.J. Pollock, IGER, Aberystwyth, UK F.I. Pugnaire, Almeria, Spain J.A. Raven, Dundee, UK H. Rennenberg, Freiburg, Germany D. Robinson, Aberdeen, UK L. Samuelson, Auburn, AL, USA D. Sanders, York, UK R. Sen, Helsinki, Finland S.E. Smith, Adelaide, Australia J. Sprent, Dundee, UK E. Thines, Kaiserslautern, Germany D. Tissue, Texas Tech University, TX, USA M. van der Heijden, Amsterdam, The Netherlands A. van der Werf, AB-DLO, Wageningen, The Netherlands N. von Wiren, Tuebingen, Germany
|