期刊名称:ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS

ISSN:1051-0761
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://www.esa.org/
期刊网址:http://esapubs.org/esapubs/journals/applications.htm
影响因子:4.657
主题范畴:ECOLOGY;    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

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



About the journal

 

 

 

The pages of Ecological Applications are open to research and discussion papers that integrate ecological science and concepts with their application and implications. Of special interest are papers that develop the basic scientific principles on which environmental decision-making should rest, and those that discuss the application of ecological concepts to environmental problem solving, policy, and management. Papers that deal explicitly with policy matters are welcome. Interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged, as are short communications on emerging environmental challenges. The journal invites manuscripts describing individual case studies that have the potential to form the basis of broader theories and concepts.   However, routine discussions of particular environmental problems, and site- and species-specific research results, will be considered only if they are placed successfully in a more general context. Papers describing new methods or techniques can be published only if they describe truly new and significant advances in methodology that can be broadly applied to the understanding or management of environmental problems. Inevitably, there will be some overlap in subject matter with Ecology; however, papers submitted to Ecological Applications should explicitly discuss the applications or implications of the work with regard to policy, management, or the analysis and solution of major environmental problems.

Ecological Applications invites contributions from scientists, policy makers, and managers concerned with the full spectrum of ecological applications. Included within this spectrum are global climate change and biogeochemistry, conservation biology, ecotoxicology and pollution ecology, fishery and wildlife ecology, forestry, agroecosystems, range management, soils, hydrology and groundwater, landscape ecology, and epidemiology. 


Instructions to Authors

 

  • How to submit a manuscript to the Journals


  • How to submit to the Bulletin

  • How the review process works

  • How accepted papers are processed

  • Conditions for publication in ESA journals

  • Types of contributions

    • Articles. Articles describing significant original research comprise the core of the journal. Articles may not exceed 20 printed pages and ideally should not exceed 15 printed pages. Abstracts should be no longer than 350 words. Articles exceeding 60 manuscript pages, counting all pages including references, tables and figures, normally will be rejected as too long.

    • Communications. Shorter articles (up to 5 journal pages) of immediate impact in fast-moving scientific debate or urgent practical application. These papers will be fast-tracked through the editorial, review and production processes so as to make possible a relatively rapid publication. These papers must be accompanied by a cover letter clearly indicating that the paper is being submitted for consideration for the Communications section and explaining why the paper warrants this special treatment. Submissions should be a maximum of 20 manuscript pages, including tables, figures, etc. Abstracts are a maximum of 200 words. Papers deemed unsuitable for Communications may be considered for publication as regular articles.

    • Invited Features.  Invited Features are intended to address various aspects of a theme that is likely to be of broad interest to applied ecologists.  Ideally, a feature should inform a broad audience about an unfamiliar topic or an area in which there has been considerable recent progress, or it should cause the audience to re-examine an issue that is not as settled as most have presumed. Proposals for Invited Features should be addressed to the Editor-in-Chief.  Additional advice and instructions are available which explain how to propose and prepare Invited Features.

    • Forums. Ecological Applications occasionally publishes Forums.  A Forum can take a number of forms but always includes a series of commentaries solicited from a number of experts.  These commentaries represent personal responses to a paper (or papers) considered to be of very broad interest and significance within the field of applied ecology. Special instructions are available.

    • Letters to the Editor (up to 4 journal pages). Letters to the Editor point out errors of fact or interpretation in, or otherwise comment on, articles that previously appeared in ESA journals, or in articles or books that are the basis of numerous articles published in ESA journals. Submissions must contain no more than 16 manuscript pages. Special procedures have been established for preparation and review of Letters to the Editor and responses to Letters.


    Questions to guide the prospective author

    Ecological Applications publishes papers across the full spectrum of applications of ecological science, covering all types of organisms and environments. At the same time, it publishes a limited number of pages per year. Consequently, the journal can only publish the very best and most significant papers. Many papers that would be publishable in journals with a narrower disciplinary, taxonomic, or geographic scope may not be publishable in Ecological Applications.

    Ecological Applications seeks to publish papers that will be interesting to a diverse audience including readers from many different subdisciplines of ecology, as well as from related disciplines. Given the focus of the journal on applications of ecological science to environmental problems, readers also include land managers, environmental consultants, ecologists with state and federal agencies, ecologists working for industry, and many others who are not necessarily heavily involved in doing research themselves. It is essential that papers published in Ecological Applications be oriented toward this broad audience, both in terms of addressing important and widespread problems and in clearly explaining how results from particular locations or on particular species may apply more broadly.

    Given these and related considerations, here are some questions that authors should ask themselves before submitting a manuscript to Ecological Applications. The acceptance rate for manuscripts submitted to ESA journals is only about 30%. The purpose of these questions is to help prospective authors determine the chances that a manuscript will fall in the group that is original and important enough to be accepted. It may take six months or longer for a decision, so if these questions raise substantial doubts about whether a manuscript satisfies these specified criteria, a lot of time might be saved by submitting it to a more specialized journal.

    1. Is your manuscript so original and important that it warrants publication in a journal that can only publish one or a few papers per issue in any particular subdiscipline (e.g., conservation biology, biogeochemistry, agroecology, toxicology), or is it better suited for a more specialized journal?

    2. Does your manuscript focus on the application of ecological science to the understanding, management, or solution of environmental problems, or is the primary motivation and focus related to basic understanding of ecological phenomena? In manuscripts submitted to Ecological Applications, it is appropriate for the Introduction to focus primarily on the environmental issue(s) being addressed rather than on more fundamental issues.

    3. Does your manuscript address an environmental issue of widespread importance, or is the issue merely of local or limited importance?  A manuscript covering a topic of local importance is better suited for a journal with a limited geographic scope.

    4. If your manuscript primarily reports on site- or species- specific results, do these results have broader implications (e.g., for other systems) and have you successfully explained how your results may offer insights to scientists or managers who are not necessarily interested in your particular system?

    5. Is your manuscript likely to be of interest and relevance only to a limited audience with training in a particular technical field, or will it appeal to a broad audience? This is a particularly crucial question for manuscripts that report new methods or approaches.

 


Editorial Board

 

Editor-in-Chief

David Schimel
National Center for Atmospheric Research
1850 Table Mesa Drive
Boulder, CO 80305

Phone: 303 497-1610
Fax: 303 497-1695
Email: eaeditor@ucar.edu

 

Ecological Archives Editor

William K. Michener

University of New Mexico

Board of Editors - with term start and end dates

Aplet Gregory H. The Wilderness Society 11/01/2002 10/31/2005
Baron Jill Colorado State University 10/01/2001 09/30/2004
Belnap Jayne USGS 05/01/2003 04/30/2006
Boggs Carol Stanford University 10/01/2003 09/30/2006
Bond Barbara Oregon State University 02/01/2002 01/31/2005
Brawn Jeffrey D. Illinois Natural History Survey 09/01/1999 09/30/2003
Brown Sandra Winrock International 11/01/2001 10/31/2004
Burke Ingrid C. Colorado State University 08/21/1995 07/31/2004
Dayton Paul Scripps Institute of Oceanography 07/15/1998 07/14/2004
Deegan Linda Marine Biological Laboratory 07/01/2002 06/30/2005
Elser James J. Arizona State University 12/01/2001 11/30/2004
Essington Timothy E. University of Washington 10/01/2003 09/30/2006
Goldstein Allen H. University of California - Berkeley 05/01/2002 04/30/2005
Goulden Michael L. University of California - Irvine 10/01/2001 09/30/2004
Gulledge Jay University of Louisville 07/01/2002 06/30/2005
Hannon Susan J. University of Alberta 05/01/1997 08/31/2003
Hobbs N. Thompson Colorado State University 07/01/2002 06/30/2005
Hollowed Anne Babcock NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service 08/01/2001 07/31/2004
James Frances C. Florida State University 09/01/1999 01/31/2006
Lamberti Gary A. University of Notre Dame 01/01/2001 01/31/2004
Linder Randal University of Texas - Austin 07/01/2002 06/30/2005
Logan Jesse A. Utah State University 11/01/2002 10/30/2005
Mladenoff David University of Wisconsin 08/01/2003 07/31/2006
Ostfeld Richard S. Institute of Ecosystem Studies 03/01/2001 02/28/2004
Peterson David L. USDA Forest Service 11/01/2000 10/31/2003
Rahel Frank J. University of Wyoming 01/15/2001 01/14/2004
Reid Walter V. The World Resources Institute 08/01/1998 07/31/2004
Scholes Robert J. CSIR, South Africa 01/01/1997 12/31/2003
Semlitsch Raymond D. University of Missouri 01/01/2003 12/31/2005
Silver Whendee L. University of California - Berkeley 01/01/2001 12/31/2003
Simons Theodore R. North Carolina State University 07/01/2003 06/30/2006
Sisk Thomas Northern Arizona University 01/01/2002 12/31/2004
Stark John M. Utah State University 07/01/2003 06/30/2006
Townsend Alan R. University of Colorado 10/01/2001 09/30/2004
Turner Monica G. University of Wisconsin 10/01/1992 09/30/2004
Wessman Carol A. University of Colorado 01/01/1998 12/31/2003
Zedler Joy B. University of Wisconsin 08/01/1999 07/31/2005

rev. 11/4/03


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