期刊名称:FISHERIES MANAGEMENT AND ECOLOGY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
|
Fisheries Management and Ecology is a journal with an international perspective. It presents papers which cover all aspects of the management, ecology and conservation of inland, estuarine and, where appropriate, coastal fisheries. The Journal aims to foster an understanding of the maintenance, development and management of the conditions under which fish populations thrive, and how they and their habitat can be conserved and enhanced. The journal further seeks to promote a thorough understanding of the dual nature of fisheries as valuable resources exploited for recreational and commercial purposes and as pivotal indicators of river or estuary quality and conservation status.
Fisheries, Management and Ecology...
¡ì seeks to help fisheries managers focus upon clear policy, management, operational, conservation and ecological issues
¡ì is designed to help fisheries ecologists become more aware of the needs of managers for information, techniques, tools and concepts
¡ì integrates ecological studies with all aspects of management ensures that the conservation of fisheries and their environment is a recurring theme in fisheries work
|

|
Instructions to Authors
Content of Author Guidelines: 1. General, 2. Ethical Guidelines, 3. Submission of Manuscripts, 4. Manuscript Types Accepted, 5. Manuscript Format and Structure, 6. After Acceptance
Relevant Documents: Copyright Transfer Agreement, Colour Work Agreement Form
Useful Websites: Submission Site, Articles published in Fisheries Management and Ecology, Author Services, Blackwell Publishing's Ethical Guidelines, Guidelines for Figures
1. GENERAL
The only fully peer-reviewed fisheries management and ecology journal
Fisheries Management and Ecology presents international papers that cover all aspects of the management, ecology and conservation of inland, estuarine and coastal fisheries including:
• Fisheries policy, management, operational, conservation and ecological issues • Fisheries managers' and ecologists' need for information, techniques, tools and concepts • Integration of ecological studies with all aspects of fisheries management • Promoting the conservation of fisheries and their environment as a recurring theme in fisheries work
Fisheries Management and Ecology aims to foster an understanding of the maintenance, development and management of the conditions under which fish populations thrive, and how they and their habitat can be conserved and enhanced. The journal further seeks to promote a thorough understanding of the dual nature of fisheries as valuable resources and as pivotal indicators of aquatic ecosystem quality and conservation status.
Please read the instructions below carefully for details on the submission of manuscripts, the journal's requirements and standards as well as information concerning the procedure after a manuscript has been accepted for publication in Fisheries Management and Ecology. Authors are encouraged to visit Wiley-Blackwell Author Services for further information on the preparation and submission of articles and figures.
2. ETHICAL GUIDELINES
Fisheries Management and Ecology adheres to the below ethical guidelines for publication and research.
2.1. Authorship and Acknowledgments
Authorship: Authors submitting a paper do so on the understanding that the manuscript has been read and approved by all authors and that all authors agree to the submission of the manuscript to the Journal. ALL named authors must have made an active contribution to the conception and design and/or analysis and interpretation of the data and/or the drafting of the paper, and ALL must have critically reviewed its content and have approved the final version submitted for publication. Participation solely in the acquisition of funding or the collection of data does not justify authorship.
Fisheries Management and Ecology adheres to the definition of authorship set up by The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). According to the ICMJE authorship criteria should be based on 1) substantial contributions to conception and design of, or acquisition of data or analysis and interpretation of data, 2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content and 3) final approval of the version to be published. Authors should meet conditions 1, 2 and 3.
It is a requirement that all authors have been accredited as appropriate upon submission of the manuscript. Contributors who do not qualify as authors should be mentioned under Acknowledgments.
Acknowledgments: Under Acknowledgments please specify contributors to the article other than the authors accredited.
2.2. Ethical Approvals
When experimental animals are used the methods section must clearly indicate that adequate measures were taken to minimize pain or discomfort. Experiments should be carried out in accordance with the Guidelines laid down by the National Institute of Health (NIH) in the USA regarding the care and use of animals for experimental procedures or with the European Communities Council Directive of 24 November 1986 (86/609/EEC) and in accordance with local laws and regulations. Ethics of investigation: Papers not in agreement with the guidelines of the Helsinki Declaration as revised in 1975 will not be accepted for publication.
2.3 DNA Sequences and Crystallographic Structure Determinations
Papers reporting protein or DNA sequences and crystallographic structure determinations will not be accepted without a Genbank or Brookhaven accession number, respectively. Other supporting data sets must be made available on the publication date from the authors directly.
2.4 Appeal of Decision
Authors who wish to appeal the decision on their submitted paper may do so by e-mailing the editors with a detailed explanation for why they find reasons to appeal the decision.
2.5 Permissions
If all or parts of previously published illustrations are used, permission must be obtained from the copyright holder concerned. It is the author's responsibility to obtain these in writing and provide copies to the Publishers.
2.6 Copyright Assignment Authors submitting a paper do so on the understanding that the work and its essential substance have not been published before and are not being considered for publication elsewhere. The submission of the manuscript by the authors means that the authors automatically agree to assign copyright to Blackwell Publishing if and when the manuscript is accepted for publication. The work shall not be published elsewhere in any language without the written consent of the publisher. The articles published in this journal are protected by copyright, which covers translation rights and the exclusive right to reproduce and distribute all of the articles printed in the journal. No material published in the journal may be stored on microfilm or videocassettes, in electronic databases and the like, or reproduced photographically without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Correspondence to the journal is accepted on the understanding that the contributing author licences the publisher to publish the letter as part of the journal or separately from it, in the exercise of any subsidiary rights relating to the journal and its contents.
Upon acceptance of a paper, authors are required to assign the copyright to publish their paper to Blackwell Publishing . Assignment of the copyright is a condition of publication, and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless copyright has been assigned. (Papers subject to government or Crown copyright are exempt from this requirement; however, the form still has to be signed). A completed Copyright Transfer Agreement must be sent before any manuscript can be published. Authors must send the completed Copyright Transfer Agreement upon receiving notice of manuscript acceptance, i.e., do not send the Copyright Transfer Agreement at submission. Please return your completed form to:
Boon Hwee CHIA Senior Production Editor Wiley Services Singapore Pte Ltd 600 North Bridge Road, #05-01 Parkview Square Singapore 188778
Alternatively a scanned version of the form can be e-mailed to bhchia@wiley.com or faxed to +65 6295 6202. For questions concerning copyright, please visit Blackwell Publishing's Copyright FAQ
3. SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTS
Manuscripts should be submitted electronically via the online submission site http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/fme The use of an online submission and peer review site enables immediate distribution of manuscripts and consequentially speeds up the review process. It also allows authors to track the status of their own manuscripts. Complete instructions for submitting a paper are available online and below. Further assistance can be obtained from http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118543587/home
3.1. Getting Started
Launch your web browser (supported browsers include Internet Explorer 6 or higher, Netscape 7.0, 7.1, or 7.2, Safari 1.2.4, or Firefox 1.0.4) and go to the journal's online Submission Site: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/fme
• Log-in or click the 'Create Account' option if you are a first-time user. • If you are creating a new account. - After clicking on 'Create Account', enter your name and e-mail information and click 'Next'. Your e-mail information is very important. - Enter your institution and address information as appropriate, and then click 'Next.' - Enter a user ID and password of your choice (we recommend using your e-mail address as your user ID), and then select your area of expertise. Click 'Finish'. • If you have an account, but have forgotten your log -in details, go to Password Help on the journals online submission system http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/fme and enter your e-mail address. The system will send you an automatic user ID and a new temporary password. • Log- in and select Author Center".
3.2. Submitting Your Manuscript
• After you have logged in, click the 'Submit a Manuscript' link in the menu bar. • Enter data and answer questions as appropriate. You may copy and paste directly from your manuscript and you may upload your pre-prepared covering letter. • Click the 'Next' button on each screen to save your work and advance to the next screen. • You are required to upload your files. - Click on the 'Browse' button and locate the file on your computer. - Select the designation of each file in the drop-down menu next to the Browse button. - When you have selected all files you wish to upload, click the 'Upload Files' button. • Review your submission (in HTML and PDF format) before sending to the Journal. Click the 'Submit' button when you are finished reviewing.
3.3. Manuscript Files Accepted
Manuscripts should be uploaded as Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rftrtf) files (not write-protected) plus separate figure files. GIF, JPEG, PICT or Bitmap files are acceptable for submission, but only high-resolution TIF or EPS files are suitable for printing. The files will be automatically converted to HTML and PDF on upload and will be used for the review process. The text file must contain the entire manuscript including title page (as a separate file), abstract, text, references, tables, and figure legends, but no embedded figures. Figure tags should be included in the file. Manuscripts should be formatted as described in the Author Guidelines below.
Please note that any manuscripts uploaded as Word 2007 (.docx) will be automatically rejected. Please save any .docx file as .doc before uploading.
3.4. Blinded Review
All manuscripts submitted to Fisheries Management and Ecology will be reviewed by at least two experts in the field. Fisheries Management and Ecology uses double-blinded review. The names of the reviewers will thus not be disclosed to the author submitting a paper and the name(s) of the author(s) will not be disclosed to the reviewers.
To allow double-blinded review, please submit (upload) your main manuscript and title page as separate files.
Please upload: • Your manuscript without title page under the file designation 'main document' • Figure files under the file designation 'figures' • The title page, Acknowledgements and Conflict of Interest Statement, where applicable, should be uploaded under the file designation 'title page'
All documents uploaded under the file designation 'title page' will not be viewable in the HTML and PDF format you are asked to review at the end of the submission process. The files viewable in the HTML and PDF format are the files available to the reviewer in the review process.
3.5. Suggest Reviewers
Fisheries Management and Ecology attempts to keep the review process as short as possible to enable rapid publication of new scientific data. In order tTo facilitate this process, please suggest the names and current e-mail addresses of at least three potential international reviewers whom you consider capable of reviewing your manuscript.
3.6. Suspension of Submission Mid-way in the Submission Process
You may suspend a submission at any phase before clicking the 'Submit' button and save it to submit later. The manuscript can then be located under 'Unsubmitted Manuscripts,' and you can click on 'Continue Submission' to continue your submission when you choose to.
3.7. E-mail Confirmation of Submission
After submission you will receive an e-mail to confirm receipt of your manuscript. If you do not receive the confirmation e-mail after within 24 hours, please check your e-mail address carefully in the system. If the e-mail address is correct please contact your IT department. The error may be caused by spam filtering software on your e-mail server. Also, the e-mails should be received if the IT department adds our e-mail server (uranus.scholarone.com) to their whitelist.
3.8. Manuscript Status
You can access ScholarOne Manuscripts (formerly known as Manuscript Central) any time to check your 'Author Center' for the status of your manuscript. The Journal will inform you by e-mail once a decision has been made.
3.9. Submission of Revised Manuscripts
Revised manuscripts must be uploaded within 60 days of authors being notified of conditional acceptance pending satisfactory revision. Locate your manuscript under 'Manuscripts with Decisions' and click on 'Submit a Revision' to submit your revised manuscript. Please remember to delete any old files uploaded when you upload your revised manuscript. Please also remember to upload your manuscript document separately from your title page.
4. MANUSCRIPT TYPES ACCEPTED
Full Papers: The first page of text must provide the title of the paper and a short abstract not exceeding 150 words but must not carry the author's name or affiliation. The text should contain an Introduction, Methods , Results, and Discussion. Pages should be numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals, but tables, figure legends (including magnifications) and acknowledgements should be submitted on separate sheets. Tables and figures should be referred to consecutively in the text.
Management and Ecological Notes: These should differ from full papers on the basis of scope or completeness, rather than quality of research. They may report on new or modified techniques or methodology, significant new information arising from problems with narrow, well-defined limits, or important findings that warrant rapid publication before broader studies are complete. Their text should not be longer than 1500 words and should not include an abstract or be divided up into conventional sections. One table or figure may be included.
5. MANUSCRIPT FORMAT AND STRUCTURE
5.1. Page Charge
There are no page charges for papers published in Fisheries Management and Ecology.
5.2. Format Language: The language of publication is UK English. Authors for whom English is a second language should have their manuscript edited by an English -speaking person before submission to make sure the English is of high quality. A list of independent suppliers of editing services can be found at http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/english_language.asp. All services are paid for and arranged by the author, and use of one of these services does not guarantee acceptance or preference for publication.
Latin Names: The full scientific name, including the authority correctly noted (i.e. with or without parentheses), should appear for each species when first mentioned in the abstract and again in the text or elsewhere, thus: Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., or rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum). The authority should not be included in the title if the Latinized name is included in the title. For further information see American Fisheries Society Special Publication No. 20, A List of Common and Scientific Names of Fishes from the United States and Canada. For fishes occurring in British waters, give precedence to: Wheeler A. (1992) A list of the common and scientific names of fishes of the British Isles. Journal of Fish Biology 41, Supplement A, 36 pp. Alternatively check FISHBASE.
Units and Spelling: Spelling should conform to The Concise Oxford Dictionary. Units of measurement, symbols and abbreviations must be given in metric units. Where any doubt arises as to the correct abbreviations, reference should be made to Quantities, Units and Symbols, 2nd edn, 1975, published by the Royal Society, London (ISBN: 0 85403 0719).
5.3. Structure
All manuscripts submitted to Fisheries Management and Ecology, except reviews or Management and Ecological Notes, should generally be arranged in the following sequence: Abstract, Key Words, Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion (a combined Results and Discussion is not normally acceptable), Acknowledgments and References. Typing should be double-spaced throughout the text, including tables, figure legends and reference lists. The maximum length of a regular article should not exceed 15 pages, excluding references, figures, and tables. Authors wishing to submit a longer paper should consult with the Editors. Text should not be written in the first person (i.e adopt the passice voice). Within sections, subdivisions should not normally exceed two grades; decimal number classification of headings and subheadings should not be used. Pages should be numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals. Tables, figure legends (including scale) must be submitted in separate files. Tables and figures should be referred consecutively in the text. All lines should be numbered consecutively throughout the manuscript (do not restart line numbers on each page). Files should not be saved as PDF (portable document format) files. The title page, which contains the following information, should be submitted in a separate file.
Title Page:
• the full title of the paper; • the full names of all the authors; • the name(s) and address(es) of the institution(s) at which the work was carried out (the present address(es) of the author(s), if different from above, should appear as a footnote); • the name, address and e-mail address of the author to whom all correspondence and proofs should be sent; • a suggested running title of not more than 50 characters, including spaces.
The first page of text must provide the title of the paper and a short abstract not exceeding 150 words but must not carry the author's name or affiliation. Please also provide six key words in alphabetical order to aid indexing.
Optimizing Your Abstract for Search Engines
Many students and researchers looking for information online will use search engines such as Google, Yahoo or similar. By optimizing your article for search engines, you will increase the chance of someone finding it. This in turn will make it more likely to be viewed and/or cited in another work. We have compiled these guidelines to enable you to maximize the web-friendliness of the most public part of your article.
5.4. References
The Journal follows the Harvard reference style.
The editor and publisher recommend that citation of online published papers and other material should be done via a DOI (digital object identifier), which all reputable online published material should have - see www.doi.org/ for more information. If an author cites anything that does not have a DOI they run the risk of the cited material not being traceable.
We recommend the use of a tool such as EndNote or Reference Manager for reference management and formatting.
EndNote reference styles can be searched for here: www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp
Reference Manager reference styles can be searched for here: www.refman.com/support/rmstyles.asp
Reference examples
Journal Brittain J.E., Lillehammer A. & Hoffmann D. (1987) Cardiopulmonary effects of clenbuterol in the horse. Journal of Nutrition 17, 565-568.
Brittain J.E. & Hoffmann D. (1987) Cardiopulmonary effects of clenbuterol in the horse. Journal of Fish Diseases 17 (Suppl. 5), 565-568.
Book Avise J.C. (1994) Cardiovascular Physiology. London: Chapman & Hall, 399 pp.
Edited book Bleed A. & Flowerday C. (eds) (1989) An Atlas of the Sand Hills. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 260 pp.
Chapter in an edited book Bleed A. & Flowerday C. (1989) Introduction. In: A. Bleed & C. Flowerday (eds) An Atlas of the Sand Hills. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska-Lincoln, pp. 1-5.
Report Devlin T.M. (1993) Textbook of Biochemistry with Clinical Correlations. Atlantis Technical Report on Aquatic Pollution No. 76. 23 pp.
Proceedings Johnston A. & Johnson J.P. (eds) Proceedings of the 6th Interscience Conference on Cardiopulmonary Effects on Animals. 7-11 August 1985. Washington: Pulmonary Institute, 340 pp.
Title/Paper in proceedings Brittain J.E., Lillehammer A. & Hoffmann D. (1987) Cardiopulmonary effects of clenbuterol in the horse. In: A. Johnston & J.P. Johnson (eds) Proceedings of the 6th Interscience Conference on Cardiopulmonary Effects on Animals. 7-11 August 1985. Washington: Pulmonary Institute, pp. 42-50.
Thesis Britton J.R. (1999) The Impact of Cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo carbo (L.) and Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis (Blumenbach)) on Inland Fisheries in the UK. PhD Thesis, Hull: University of Hull, 98 pp.
5.5. Citations
The Journal follows the Harvard reference style. et al. should be used for in-text citations with 3 or more authors.
Citation examples
Direct citations
Smith (1997, 1999), Andrew (1998a, b), Coleman and Tauber (2000a, b, c), Coleman et al. (1990)
Indirect citations
(Smith & Coleman 1997, 1999; Andrew 1998a, b; Coleman et al. 1990)
5.6. Tables, Figures and Figure Legends
Tables: should only be used to clarify important points. Tables must, as far as possible, be self-explanatory. The tables should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals.
Figures: should only be used to clarify important points. All graphs, drawings and photographs are considered figures and should be numbered in sequence with Arabic numerals. Each figure should have a legend and legends for all figures should be typed together on a separate sheet and numbered correspondingly. Figures should not contain detail that may be lost when reduced in size for printing. Figure axis titles should use Arial font, sentence case and units of measure should be set off with a comma from the parameter in the legend.
If all or parts of previously published illustrations are used, permission must be obtained from the copyright holder concerned. It is the author's responsibility to obtain these in writing and provide copies to the Publisher.
All figures and artwork must be provided in electronic format. Please save vector graphics (e.g. line artwork) in Encapsulated Postscript Format (EPS) and bitmap files (e.g. halftones) or clinical or in vitro pictures in Tagged Image Format (TIFF). In the full-text online edition of the journal, figure legends may be truncated in abbreviated links to the full screen version. Therefore, the first 100 characters of any legend should inform the reader of key aspects of the figure. Further information can be obtained at Blackwell Publishing's guidelines for illustrations: http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/illustration.asp
Preparation of Electronic Figures for Publication
Although low quality images are adequate for review purposes, print publication requires high quality images to prevent the final product being blurred or fuzzy. Submit EPS (line art) or TIFF (halftone/photographs) files only. MS PowerPoint and Word Graphics are unsuitable for printed pictures. Do not use pixel-oriented programmes. Scans (TIFF only) should have a resolution of at least 300 dpi (halftone) or 600 to 1200 dpi (line drawings) in relation to the reproduction size (see below). Please submit the data for figures in black and white or submit a Colour Work Agreement Form (see Colour Charges below). EPS files should be saved with fonts embedded (and with a TIFF preview if possible).
For scanned images, the scanning resolution (at final image size) should be as follows to ensure good reproduction: line art: >600 dpi; halftones (including gel photographs): >300 dpi; figures containing both halftone and line images: >600 dpi.
Further information can be obtained at Blackwell Publishing's guidelines for figures: http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/illustration.asp
Check your electronic artwork before submitting it: http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/eachecklist.asp
Permissions: If all or parts of previously published illustrations are used, permission must be obtained from the copyright holder concerned. It is the author's responsibility to obtain these in writing and provide copies to the Publisher.
Colour Charges: It is the policy of Fisheries Management and Ecology for authors to pay the full cost for the reproduction of their colour artwork. Therefore, please note that if there is colour artwork in your manuscript when it is accepted for publication, Blackwell Publishing requires you to complete and return a Colour Work Agreement Form before your paper can be published. Any article received by Blackwell Publishing with colour work will not be published until the form has been returned. If you are unable to access the internet, or are unable to download the form, please contact the Production Editor (fme@wiley.com)
In the event that an author is not able to cover the costs of reproducing colour figures in colour in the printed version of the journal, Fisheries Management and Ecology offers authors the opportunity to reproduce colour figures in colour for free in the online version of the article (but they will still appear in black and white in the print version). If an author wishes to take advantage of this free colour-on-the-web service, they should liaise with the Editorial Office to ensure that the appropriate documentation is completed for the Publisher.
5.6. Most Common Faults in Manuscripts
1. Title page layout. Authors should consult past published papers. 2. Abstract contains information other than the main findings. Abstract reports significant differences but does not tell how values differed. 3. Headings. Authors should consult past published papers. 4. Naming of species, e.g. no authority given on first mention and incorrect use of brackets for authority. 5. Use of active voice (usually the first person). The passive voice must be used. 6. References, e.g. lack of match between text and list and wrong format, particularly commas should not be given between surname and initials of authors, journal titles not given in full and page range not given for books or chapters in books. 7. The quality of the figures are is not adequate (clarity and font sizes), especially when reduced for publication. 8. Figure and caption, e.g. figure legends, should be in the figure title, not on the figure. 9. Tables are over-elaborate and not formatted accurately. 10. Tables should be done in Word; Excel tables in a Word document cannot be edited. 11. Significant digits: inappropriate level of precision and mismatch of decimal places, e.g. between mean and S.D., S.E., etc. 12. Files submitted as PDFs.
6. AFTER ACCEPTANCE
Upon acceptance of a paper for publication, the manuscript will be forwarded to the Production Editor (fme@wiley.com) who is responsible for the production of the journal.
6.1 Proof Corrections
The corresponding author will receive an e-mail alert containing a link to a website. A working e-mail address must therefore be provided for the corresponding author. The proof can be downloaded as a PDF (portable document format) file from this site.
Acrobat Reader will be required in order to read this file. This software can be downloaded (free of charge) from the following website: www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html . This will enable the file to be opened, read on screen, and printed out in order forso any corrections to be added. Further instructions will be sent with the proof. Hard-copy proofs will be posted if no e-mail address is available; in your absence, please arrange for a colleague to access your e-mail to retrieve the proofs.
As changes to proofs are costly, we ask that you only correct typesetting errors. Excessive changes made by the author in the proofs, excluding typesetting errors, will be charged separately. Other than in exceptional circumstances, all illustrations are retained by the publisher. Please note that the author is responsible for all statements made in their work, including changes made by the copy editor.
6.2 Early View (Publication Prior to Print)
Fisheries Management and Ecology is covered by Blackwell Publishing's Early View service. Early View articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Early View articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication;, and the authors' final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of Early View articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so Early View 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.
6.3 Author Services
Online production tracking is available for your article through Wiley-Blackwell's Author Services. Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Authors can check the status of their articles online and choose to receive automated e-mails at key stages of production. The author will receive an e-mail with a unique link that enables them to register and have their article automatically added to the system. Please ensure that a complete e-mail address is provided when submitting the manuscript. Visit http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/ for more details on online production tracking and for a wealth of resources including FAQs and tips on article preparation, submission and more.
For more substantial information on the services provided for authors, please see Wiley-Blackwell Author Services
6.4 Author Material Archive Policy
Please note that unless specifically requested, Blackwell Publishing will dispose of all hardcopy or electronic material submitted two months after publication. If you require the return of any material submitted, please inform the editorial office or production editor as soon as possible.
6.5 Offprints and Extra Copies
Free access to the final PDF offprint or your article will be available via author services only. Please therefore sign up for author services if you would like to access your article PDF offprint and enjoy the many other benefits the service offers. Additional paper offprints may be ordered online. Please click on the following link, fill in the necessary details and ensure that you type information in all of the required fields: offprint.cosprinters.com/cos/bw/main.jsp?SITE_ID=bw&FID=USER_HOME_PG If you have queries about offprints please e-mail offprint@cosprinters.com
Editorial Board
Editors Ian G. Cowx Hull International Fisheries Institute University of Hull Cottingham Road Hull East Yorkshire HU6 7RX UK e-mail: I.G.Cowx@hull.ac.uk
Hal Schramm Leader Mississippi Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research Unit Mail Stop 9691 Mississippi State MS 39762 USA E-mail: hschramm@cfr.msstate.edu
Associate Editors Gordon Copp - Cefas-Lowestoft and Bournemouth University - Lowestoft - UK Robin L. Welcomme - Long Barn - Stoke by Clare - UK
Editorial Board Miran Aprahamian - Warrington - UK Dr Peter Bayley - Oregon State University - USA Dr J Braken - University College Dublin - Ireland Dr Alain Crivelli - Camargue - France Prof T Cross - University College Cork - Ireland Prof Stephen Dadzie - Kuwait University - Kuwait Prof Sena de Silva - Deakin University - Australia Dr Lars Hansen - Norwegian Institute for Nature Research - Norway Dr Peter Hutchinson - NASCO, Edinburgh - UK Dr John Kocik - Northeast Fisheries Science Centre, Maine - USA Dr M Pawson - CEFAS - UK Dr Miguel Petrere Jr - UNESP - Brazil Michael Power - University of Waterloo - Canada Gorm Rasmussen - Danish Institute of Fisheries Research - Denmark Dr Willie Shearer - Montrose - Scotland Dr Robin Welcomme - Cambridge - UK Alan Whitfield - JLB Smith Institute of Ichthyology - South Africa Dr Maciej Zalewski - Institute of Environmental Biology - Poland
|