期刊名称:MIRES AND PEAT

ISSN:1819-754X
出版频率:Irregular
出版社:INT PEAT SOC, INT PEAT SOC, DUNDEE, ENGLAND, DD1 4HN
  出版社网址:http://www.peatsociety.org/publications/mires-and-peat-journal
期刊网址:http://www.mires-and-peat.net/
影响因子:1.425
主题范畴:ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
变更情况:

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



About the journal

18 articles published in the last nine months: Show new papers

Mires and Peat is a peer-reviewed internet journal focusing specifically on mires, peatlands and peat.  As a truly “free-to-users” publication (i.e. NO subscriptions and NO publication charges), it is immediately accessible to readers and potential authors worldwide.  It is published jointly by the International Peat Society (IPS) and the International Mire Conservation Group (IMCG).

Mires and Peat is indexed by Thomson Reuters Web of Science, EBSCO Environment Complete, CABI Abstracts, CSA Proquest (including their Aquatic Science and Fisheries Abstracts ASFA, Ecology, Entomology, Animal Behavior, Aqualine and Pollution databases) and Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ). Mires and Peat also participates in the CABI Full Text Repository.

Mires and Peat publishes high-quality research papers on all aspects of peatland science, technology and wise use, including:

  • ecology, hydrology, survey, inventory, classification, functions and values of mires and peatlands;
  • scientific, economic and human aspects of the management of peatlands for agriculture, forestry, nature conservation, environmental protection, peat extraction, industrial development and other purposes;
  • biological, physical and chemical characteristics of peat; and
  • climate change and peatlands.

Short communications and review articles on these and related topics will also be considered; and suggestions for special issues of the Journal based on the proceedings of conferences, seminars, symposia and workshops will be welcomed.  The submission of material by authors and from countries whose work would otherwise be inaccessible to the international community is particularly encouraged.

As an additional service to readers, Mires and Peat will also publish selected short reviews of relevant books. Please contact the Editor if you wish to suggest a title for review.


Instructions to Authors

Papers must be written in English. Author(s) are referred to the Tips for Authors (especially those who are not native English speakers). Those whose first language is not English are strongly advised to have their manuscripts checked by a proficient third party before submission.

Please note that papers arising from postgraduate theses and commissioned research reports will usually require substantial re-writing in order to convert them into a format that is suitable for journal publication.

Papers should not, as a rule, exceed 6,000 words or 20 printed pages, including Figures and Tables. Papers exceeding this limit should be discussed with the Editor.

Each manuscript will normally be reviewed by two referees. If it is accepted for publication, the author(s) will automatically transfer copyright to the Journal.

Arrangement

Manuscripts should usually follow this sequence: Title; Author(s); Summary; Key Words (up to 5 that are not in the article title); Introduction (ending with a concise statement of the purpose of the article); Methods; Results; Discussion; Acknowledgements; References.
If appropriate, there may be additional (optional) sections on: Study Site (after Introduction) and Conclusions (after Discussion). In review-style manuscripts, Methods and Results may be substituted with other main headings.

Technical Data

Manuscripts should be provided in ‘.doc’ (or ‘.rtf’) format. Do not use ‘.docx’ or ‘.pdf’ format, or LaTeX as these are unsuitable for reviewers. The manuscript should be double-spaced in 11 pt Times New Roman characters on page size A4 (21 x 29.7 cm), with margins of 2 cm all round (top, bottom and both sides of page). The first line of each paragraph should be indented by 0.5 cm UNLESS it follows a section or sub-section heading, and there should be only one character space between each pair of sentences. Pages should be numbered consecutively, including those containing Acknowledgements, References, Figures and Tables. Please do not use autoformatting or cross-referencing, but do add line numbers.

The title page should contain the initials, surnames and affiliations (including countries) of the author(s). One ‘corresponding author’ should be nominated, and his/her full postal address, telephone number, fax number and e-mail address should be given at the end of the manuscript. Please see papers already published in Mires and Peat for detailed examples.

The Summary must be less than 200 words, reporting concisely on the purpose and results of the paper.

Three headings may be used, all aligned to the left margin: PRINCIPAL HEADING (all upper case), First subheading (initial uppercase) and Second subheading (italics, initial uppercase).

Please observe also the following points when drafting:

  • Units of measurement should comply with international standards (SI units).
  • Please use standard abbreviations (mm, m, Ma, t, oC, NW-SE, Pb, etc.).
  • Use the word-ending ‘ise’ rather than ‘ize’ where both are available, e.g. ‘minimise’.
  • Circa’ should be abbreviated to ‘ca.
  • Use long hyphens [Ctrl+Fn+;(semicolon)] for ranges e.g. “pp. 237–261” and short hyphens to divide and connect words, e.g. “half-baked”. 
  • Mires and Peat does not use the abbreviations “Fig.” and “Tab.” for Figures and Tables.

Citations

References in the text to other articles should merely indicate the name of the author (followed by an ampersand and the name of the second author when there are two or by “et al.” in italics when there are more than two) and the publication date of the article in parentheses. If the paper refers to two articles by the same authors from the same year, they should be distinguished by ‘a’, ‘b’ etc. appended to the date. For example: Robert & Kelly (1987a), Köppel (1983), Basto Neto et al. (1991) or (Robert & Kelly 1987a) etc. Where two or more citations are listed together, they should be presented in date order (earliest first) and separated by commas, e.g. (Köppel 1983, Robert & Kelly 1987a, Basto Neto et al. 1991).

List of References

The References should include all the citations quoted in the text and only those citations, listing the authors alphabetically and then chronologically when several references by the same author(s) are given. Quote journal names in full, NOT abbreviated form. References should be cited as “in press” only if already accepted for publication, in which case the journal name, volume number and year must be stated. Book and journal titles should be in italics with upper case initial letters. For books, please give the place of publication and either the total number of pages or the page range for the material cited. Where a reference is published in a language other than English, a translation of the title should be given in parentheses and the language of publication indicated. For items that are available both on paper and via the internet, “online at:” and a web address may be appended in the reference list. References that are exclusively available by internet should be listed under the name of the author or owner of the web site. Where the reference is in a language that is written in non-Roman characters, the ‘international standard’ Roman transliteration of the citation should be used.

Examples:

Williams, S.T. & Gray T.R.G. (1974) Net primary production of the dominant bryophytes in a Sphagnum-dominated wetland in West Virginia. Bryologist, 86, 280–286.

Turbridy, M. (ed) (1984) Creation and management of a heritage zone at Clonmacnoise, Co. Offaly, Ireland. EEC Final Report, Environmental Science Unit, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, 206 pp.

Finney, H.R., Gross, E.R. & Farnham, R.S. (1974) Limnic materials in peatlands of Minnesota. In: Stelly, M. (ed) Histosols: Their Characteristics, Classification and Use, Soil Science Society of America, Madison, Wisconsin, Special Publications No. 6, 21–31.

Schuch, M. (1991) Moorforschung und Moornutzung sowie die landwirtschaftliche Niedermoornutzung und ihre Bedeutung für den Naturschutz in Bayern (Peatland research, peatland use and the agricultural utilisation of fens and their importance for nature conservation in Bavaria). Telma, 21, 19–126 (in German).

Naucke, W. (1990) Chemie von Moor und Torf (Peatland and peat chemistry). In: Göttlich, K. (ed), Moor und Torfkunde (Peatland and Peat Science). E. Schweizerbart, Stuttgart, 237–261 (in German).

Bragg, O. & Lindsay, R. (eds.) (2003) Strategy and Action Plan for Mire and Peatland Conservation in Central Europe. Publ. No. 18, Wetlands International, Wageningen, 93pp. Online at: http://www. wetlands.org/pubs&/CEPP.htm.

NLP Jasmund (2006) Nationalpark Jasmund: Klima und Böden (Jasmund National Park: climate and soils), http://www.nationalpark-jasmund.de/ (Das Gebiet/ Klima und Böden) (in German).

DWD (2006) Deutscher Wetterdienst: Mittelwerte der Periode 1961 bis 1990 (German Weather Service: mean values for the period 1961–1990). http://www.dwd.de/de/FundE/Klima/KLIS/daten/ online/nat/index_mittelwerte.htm (in German).

Tsinzerling, Yu.D. (1938) Rastitel'nost' bolot / Rastitel'nost' SSSR. T.1. Moskva-Leningrad. (Vegetation of mires / Vegetation of USSR. 1. Moscow-Leningrad). Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk SSSR, 355–428 (in Russian).

For languages written in non-Roman characters, a subsidiary reference list giving the non-Roman references cross-referenced to the transliterated items in the main reference list may (optionally) be included where authors feel that this is necessary to facilitate location of the material by readers; see Mires and Peat Volume 2 (2007) Article 01 for an example.

Tables and Figures

In the initial submission, Tables and Figures (other illustrations should be treated as Figures) may be incorporated into the document, near the text that refers to them, OR appended, each on a separate page, to the rest of the text. Tables and Figures are referred to in the text as (Table 1), (Figure 1), and their legends should be complete and understandable in their own right. The resolution of Figures in the initial submission should be sufficiently high to make them clear on the reviewer’s computer screen, but excessively high resolutions should be avoided in order that the total size of the document submitted for review will remain manageable as an attachment to an email. If at all possible, keep the size of the whole document below 1 MB.

What is needed in the final submission for publication is described below (in REVISIONS).

Submission

Electronic submission is required. If possible, send your initial manuscript as a single e-mail attachment to the Editor, Dr Olivia Bragg o(dot)m(dot)bragg(at)dundee(dot)ac(dot)uk, who can normally receive fairly large (up to 10 MB) attachments. However, if you send a large attachment (>2 MB), please send a separate e-mail without attachments informing the Editor that a large file has been sent, in case the latter is rejected by the e-mail server. If you experience difficulty sending several large files attached to one message, try sending several messages with fewer files attached to each. If the files cannot be sent by e-mail, they should be sent by post on CD or DVD. Such disks should be packed adequately to avoid damage in the post. The address for postal submissions is:

Dr Olivia Bragg
Mires and Peat
Social and Environmental Sciences (Geography)
University of Dundee
Dundee DD1 4HN
United Kingdom

Revisions

Once your manuscript has been reviewed, the managing editor will send you a decision letter. In most cases, the acceptance of manuscripts is subject to revisions being made. When you have completed the revisions to your own satisfaction (although further amendments may be requested by Mires and Peat later), the manuscript should be re-submitted to the managing editor, preferably by email, in the following format:

  1.  A single file ( ‘.doc’ or ‘.rtf’, not ‘.docx’ or ‘.pdf’ format) containing the text, with appended Tables (each on a separate page) and Figure captions collected together at the end. This file should NOT contain embedded Tables or Figures.

  2. Each Figure should now be provided as an individual file in a recognised image format, at a resolution of at least 300 dpi. for an area usually between 2 and 5 inches (5 and 12 cm) side. Bit image files in ‘.tif’, ‘.tiff’, ‘.png’, or in vector image ‘.svg’ are the best. These can be compressed and decompressed without loss of information. The ‘.jpg’, ‘.jpeg’ formats are suitable if that is the format of the original image, as it often is with photographs, but should not be used otherwise because every time a ‘jpeg’ image is saved some information is lost, even with a ‘no compression’ setting. The ‘.raw’ format for photographs is not suitable because there are numerous proprietary variants of it. Avoid sending very large graphics files, as these will have to be compressed or otherwise reduced in size before publication. If you have any Figures that are not available as separate image files, these may (exceptionally) be collected together (at resolution suitable for publication) in a second ‘.doc’ file.

Revised 24 June 2010

 

Download Instructions to Authors (50 kb)


Instructions to Authors
map_instructions.pdf

Editorial Board

Mires and Peat Editorial Board, December 2014

The Editorial Board (EB) is appointed by agreement between the Board of the International Peat Society (IPS) and the Main Board of the International Mire Conservation Group (IMCG). It is responsible for editorial policy, standards, and the general management of the Journal. The Editors and Web Administrator are routinely involved in the processing of manuscripts and book reviews. Associate Editors assist as appropriate with the peer review process, with scientific and language editing, and by contributing peer reviews and book reviews. The current membership of the EB is given below.

Editors

  • Dr Olivia Bragg, School of the Environment (Geography), University of Dundee, UK (Editor-in-Chief)
  • Professor R.S. Clymo, QMW, University of London, UK
  • Professor Stephan Glatzel, Department of Geography and Regional Research, University of Vienna, Austria
  • Dr Peter Jones, Natural Resources Wales, Bangor, UK
  • Professor Jack Rieley, Centre for Environmental Management, Department of Geography, University of Nottingham, UK (Deputy Editor-in-Chief)

Associate Editors

  • Professor George Bredenkamp, Department of Botany, University of Pretoria, South Africa
  • Professor Frank Chambers, Centre for Environmental Change and Quaternary Research, University of Gloucestershire, UK
  • Professor Fred Ellery, Department of Environmental Science, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
  • Professor Lars G. Franzén, Earth Sciences Centre, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
  • Dr Arthur Groot, Wood Fibre Centre, Canadian Forest Service, Ontario
  • Dr Hannu Hökkä, Rovaniemi Research Unit, Finnish Forest Research Institute
  • Professor Geoffrey Hope, Department of Archaeology and Natural History, Australian National University, Canberra
  • Professor Hans Joosten, Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology, Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-University, Greifswald, Germany
  • Dr Wiktor Kotowski, Department of Plant Ecology and Environmental Conservation, University of Warsaw, Poland
  • Dr Derrick Lai, Department of Geography and Resource Management, Chinese University of Hong Kong
  • Professor Lars Lundin, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala
  • Professor Edward Maltby, Centre for Sustainable Water, Integrated Management and Ecosystem Research, University of Liverpool, UK
  • Dr Roger Meade, Roger Meade Associates, Penrith, UK
  • Dr Timo Nyrönen, R&D Director (retired), Vapo Oy, Jyväskylä, Finland
  • Dr Susan Page, Department of Geography, University of Leicester, UK
  • Professor emeritus Juhani Päivänen, Department of Forest Ecology, University of Helsinki, Finland
  • Dr Richard Payne, Environment Department, University of York, UK
  • Professor Jonathan Price, Department of Geography, University of Waterloo, Canada
  • Professor Bostang Radjagukguk, Department of Soil Science, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Professor Line Rochefort, Department of Plant Sciences, Université Laval, Québec, Canada
  • Dr Anne Jelle Schilstra, IVEM Center for Energy and Environmental Studies, University of Groningen, The Netherlands
  • Dipl.-Ing. Gerald Schmilewski, Research and Development, Klasmann-Deilmann GmbH, Saterland-Sedelsberg, Germany
  • Professor Andrey Sirin, Institute of Forest Science, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • Professor Lech Szajdak, Research Centre for Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznan
  • Dr Mike Waddington, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University, Ontario, Canada
  • Professor Shane Ward, Biosystems Engineering, University College Dublin, Ireland
  • Dr Bryan Wheeler, Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK
  • Professor Jutta Zeitz, Faculty of Agriculture and Horticulture, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany

    Web Administrator

    • Dr habil. Michael Trepel, Schleswig-Holstein Ministry for Energiewende, Agriculture, Environment and Rural Areas, Kiel, Germany

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