万维提示:
1、投稿方式:在线投稿。
2、期刊网址:https://academic.oup.com/jinsectscience
3、投稿网址:http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jis
4、官网邮箱:pubs@entsoc.org(编辑部)
ljunker@entsoc.org
更多编辑邮箱如下。
5、期刊刊期:双月刊,逢单月出版。
2021年6月26日星期六
投稿须知【官网信息】
Instructions to Authors
Journal Policies
About The Journal
The Journal of Insect Science is published on a continuous publication model, which means papers are published as soon as they are ready. JIS papers are published online and are not published in print. The journal publishes articles in all areas of entomology, from the molecular to the ecological. In addition to research papers, JIS publishes Reviews, interpretive articles in a Forum section, Short Communications, and Letters to the Editor.
In February 2015, Dr. Phyllis Weintraub was appointed as the Editor in Chief of JIS.
Open Access Policy
All content published in Journal of Insect Science is made freely available online to all under an Open Access model. There are no subscription fees. A publication fee is charged when a manuscript has been accepted for publication. See Charges, Licensing, and Self-Archiving.
Journal Submissions
The journals published by ESA primarily contain research articles, all of which are peer reviewed before being accepted for publication. In addition to scientific research articles, the journals publish letters to the editor, interpretive or evaluative articles that appear in a Forum section, and book reviews (all book reviews appear in American Entomologist). Manuscripts that describe entomological techniques and computer software programs generally are not considered for publication in the journals.
Forum Submissions
Papers that are published in the Forum section are authored by acknowledged leaders in the field. Forum articles are reviews of a research area that include a stimulating, thought-provoking discussion and that focus on important, and sometimes controversial, issues. They should provide an innovative approach to current thought and speculate about future research directions. Forum articles may also be written by invitation of the journal editor-in-chief.
Short Communications
Short communications should be similar to articles with Materials and Methods and Discussion briefer. Total length should be 2,000 words or less.
Letter to the Editor Submissions and Policy
Each journal will entertain submissions in the form of a Letter to the Editor in which the author or authors express their viewpoint on scientific issues. Appropriate content can include comments or criticisms in reference to a published paper, whether or not in an ESA journal, or comments and opinions unrelated to a specific published paper. A Letter will be limited to 2,000 words, 10 references, and one table or figure. The Editor-in-Chief (EIC) will judge whether a submitted Letter merits consideration for potential publication based on relevance, inherent interest, and coherence of the submission, but with a view to allowing a range of opinions to be expressed. If the EIC considers the submission to be suitable in principle, he/she will send it to at least one anonymous reviewer for comments, and will edit it for style and appropriate language before returning it to the corresponding author for revisions.
In the case of a Letter which criticizes a published paper, the latter can be from an ESA journal or any peer-reviewed journal, including papers published in final form online before appearing in the hardcopy issue. The paper being addressed in the Letter must be cited in full, including complete volume and page information, or DOI information if in electronic form. The EIC will require resubmission of a Letter to the Editor that is dated or received before the official publication date of the paper in question. A submitted Letter criticizing an unpublished paper can be considered only if written permission has been received from the corresponding author of that paper, regardless of how the authors of the Letter came into possession of the unpublished material. The EIC will arrange with at least one anonymous reviewer to return comments within one week. The Letter writer(s) shall have at least one week to make revisions and resubmit.
After revisions by the authors, if necessary, and acceptance by the EIC, the corresponding author of the paper being criticized will be contacted by the EIC, provided with the Letter which has been accepted (and which is therefore no longer eligible for author-initiated changes beyond minor typographical errors in proof stage), and given at least two weeks to submit a Response. The same format and word limitations apply to the Response as described above for the Letter to the Editor. The EIC will arrange for at least one anonymous peer review of the Response within one week, and edit the Response for style and appropriate language. The authors will be given at least one week to make revisions and to resubmit. If the authors of the Response meet these timelines, they will be guaranteed to have their Response published in tandem with the original Letter to the Editor in the earliest possible issue as dictated by the journal production schedule. If the authors of the Response fail to meet these timelines, they may still submit a Response, but forfeit the right to have it published in the same issue as the Letter to the Editor. The authors of the Letter to the Editor will not be allowed to see the Response before publication, unless the authors of the Response request in writing to the EIC that it be shared. For both the Letter to the Editor and the Response, the EIC will edit the submissions to remove discourteous language or personal attacks of any kind. Ad hominem arguments are not allowed in either the Letter or the Response, and are grounds for rejection. Page charges shall be waived for Letters to the Editor and Response letters.
Corresponding author
Only one author can be designated as the corresponding author. Authors are welcome to include a footnote designating that multiple authors contributed equally to the work. Authors are encouraged to include a statement of author contribution and are welcome to use the CRediT taxonomy of roles.
Manuscript Review
Review Process
Before any manuscript is accepted for publication, it is evaluated by two reviewers qualified to assess the significance and quality of the research. Reviewers comment on the content of the manuscript, the methodology of the experiment, and the results. Reviewers recommend revisions to the manuscript and suggest whether a manuscript should be accepted or rejected for publication. Reviewers are selected by the editors. The editor may seek additional reviews of a manuscript or have a resubmitted one reviewed again. However, the decision to accept or reject a manuscript for publication is the responsibility of the editor, not the reviewer.
In addition, the editor may withdraw or recommend transfer of a manuscript to another ESA publication. A manuscript is withdrawn by the editor when the data are sound, but there is a major flaw(s) in the manuscript that can be fixed. If a manuscript has been withdrawn rather than rejected, it can be resubmitted at a later date, but the author must take into account the comments of the editor and reviewers before doing so. When it is resubmitted, it will be treated as a new submission and need additional peer review. In the cover letter, authors must that a previous version of the paper was withdrawn and note the previous manuscript number. A withdrawal cannot be appealed by the authors.
A manuscript is rejected by the subject editor when there is a fundamental flaw in the data that cannot be fixed, or for other reasons. A manuscript describing that data set cannot be submitted again to an ESA journal. A rejection can be appealed to the editorial board.
The review process also is handled online using the ScholarOne system.
Appeal of a Rejection
An author can appeal an editor's decision to reject a manuscript for publication through the ESA Publications Council. To appeal a rejection, the author must send the following items to the ESA Director of Publications:
A letter that explains why the author has chosen to appeal the rejection. The letter should address specific reasons provided by the editor for the rejection.
The editor’s letter of rejection.
The reviewers’ comments.
The rejected, unrevised manuscript. If a rejected manuscript has been revised before an appeal, the rejection cannot be appealed.
Any additional correspondence.
These items may be sent as e-mail attachments to pubs@entsoc.org. If sending hard copy, send 6 copies of each item by mail to the Entomological Society of America, Director of Publications, 3 Park Place, Suite 307, Annapolis, MD 21401-3722, USA.
The Director of Publications forwards these materials to the Publications Council’s appeals subcommittee for review. The appeals subcommittee reviews and discusses the materials provided. In writing, the subcommittee then informs the author, editor, and the Director of Publications of their decision. The decision of the Publications Council is final. The appeals process takes approximately 1 month from when the Publications Council receives the appeal materials.
Data Archiving
ESA journals encourage authors to deposit data supporting the results in the paper in an appropriate public archive. Data are important products of the scientific enterprise and they should be preserved and usable for decades in the future. Authors may elect to have the data publicly available at time of publication, or, if the technology of the archive allows, may opt to embargo access to the data. ESA journals will provide support to link the paper and data. Any costs associated with archiving the data are the responsibility of the author.
Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest
Potential conflicts of interest include any relationships of a financial or personal nature between an author or coauthor and individuals or organizations within three years of submission which, in theory, could affect or bias an author’s scientific judgment, or limit an author’s freedom to publish, analyze, discuss, or interpret relevant data. Sources of financial support originating outside the coauthors’ home institution(s) for any aspect of a study must be indicated in the Acknowledgments section of the paper. Financial support includes not only funding, but gratis provision of materials, services, or equipment. Any additional potential conflicts of interest, not covered in the acknowledgments of financial support, must be revealed to the editor at submission, and disclosed in a statement immediately following the Acknowledgments. If an author or coauthor has entered into an agreement with any entity outside that authors’ home institution, including the home institution of another coauthor, giving that entity veto power over publication of the study or over presentation, analysis, discussion, or interpretation of any results of the study, whether or not such veto power was exercised, this information must be disclosed in a statement immediately following the Acknowledgments. As a suggestion, such a statement could take the following form: “This manuscript is published with the concurrence of [Institution / Company / Individual / etc. X].“ If no potential conflicts of interest exist, this must be stated in the cover letter to the editor at submission.
Ethics
Authors should observe high standards with respect to publication ethics as set out by ESA and the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Any cases of ethical misconduct are treated very seriously and will be dealt with in accordance with ESA's author misconduct policy and the COPE guidelines. Further information about OUP's ethical policies.
Manuscript Preparation
Outline
JIS Moving to Double-Anonymous Peer Review
To help reduce potential bias in peer review, JIS is piloting a double-anonymous (also known as double-blind) review process beginning on January 14, 2021. In a double-anonymous process, neither the authors nor reviewers know each other’s identities. For authors submitting January 14 or after, please:
Upload a page with your author list, affiliations, and acknowledgements in a separate file (this file will not be sent to reviewers).
Remove references to “our previous studies” or other language that could be self-identifying.
New Submissions
Formatting
For new submissions, our formatting requirements are simple—just make sure your paper has the following items:
Continuous line numbers
Double-spaced lines
A title page and abstract in the main document
A main document in a doc, docx, tex (converted to PDF for review),or rtf file type
Tables in a Word document (we cannot accept Excel files, unless they are supplementary files)
Figure and table legends in the main document
All coauthors entered into the online review system (email addresses required)
References listed in alphabetical order, cited by author and year in the text (not numbered).
Figures and tables at the end of the main document after the references, or uploaded as separate files. Figure legends should be included at the end of the main text after the references, and table legends should be next to their corresponding tables.
Text is single-column.
Please note there are more formatting guidelines for revised versions, as those are closer to being accepted (see the Revised Versions section of these author instructions).
Author Contribution Statements
The contributions of all authors must be provided during the article submission process. This journal uses the CRediT Taxonomy to describe each author’s individual contributions to the work, and there will be a step during submission to select all relevant contributions from each author. The roles selected during submission will automatically be included in an author contribution statement placed after the acknowledgments in the published paper. While the submitting author is responsible for selecting the contributions, all authors should have agreed to their individual contributions before submission, and all contributions listed should be accurate.
The 14 contributor roles available are:
Conceptualization – Ideas; formulation or evolution of overarching research goals and aims.
Data curation – Management activities to annotate (produce metadata), scrub data and maintain research data (including software code, where it is necessary for interpreting the data itself) for initial use and later re-use.
Formal analysis – Application of statistical, mathematical, computational, or other formal techniques to analyze or synthesize study data.
Funding acquisition - Acquisition of the financial support for the project leading to this publication.
Investigation – Conducting a research and investigation process, specifically performing the experiments, or data/evidence collection.
Methodology – Development or design of methodology; creation of models.
Project administration – Management and coordination responsibility for the research activity planning and execution.
Resources – Provision of study materials, reagents, materials, patients, laboratory samples, animals, instrumentation, computing resources, or other analysis tools.
Software – Programming, software development; designing computer programs; implementation of the computer code and supporting algorithms; testing of existing code components.
Supervision – Oversight and leadership responsibility for the research activity planning and execution, including mentorship external to the core team.
Validation – Verification, whether as a part of the activity or separate, of the overall replication/reproducibility of results/experiments and other research outputs.
Visualization – Preparation, creation and/or presentation of the published work, specifically visualization/data presentation.
Writing – original draft – Preparation, creation and/or presentation of the published work, specifically writing the initial draft (including substantive translation).
Writing – review & editing – Preparation, creation and/or presentation of the published work by those from the original research group, specifically critical review, commentary or revision – including pre- or post-publication stages.
Here’s an example of what the author contribution statement will look like in the published paper:
BAC: Conceptualization; Data curation; Formal analysis; Funding acquisition; Investigation; Methodology; Project administration; Resources; Supervision; Validation; Visualization; Writing—original draft; Writing—review & editing. LS: Conceptualization; Data curation; Formal analysis; Funding acquisition; Investigation; Methodology; Supervision; Validation; Writing—review & editing. NT: Data curation; Formal analysis; Investigation; Validation; Writing— review & editing.
Click here for more information on the CRediT contributor roles taxonomy.
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更多详情:
https://academic.oup.com/jinsectscience/pages/General_Instructions
期刊编辑邮箱【官网信息】
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief
Dr. Phyllis G. Weintraub
Gilat Research Center, D.N. Negev, Israel
Email: edinchiefjis@gmail.com
Deputy Editor
Margaret L. Allen
USDA-ARS, Stoneville, MS, USA
Email: meg.allen@ars.usda.gov
Subject Editors
Christos G. Athanassiou
University of Thessaly, Nea Ionia, Greece
Email: athanassiou@agr.uth.gr
Brian Aukema
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Email: bhaukema@umn.edu
Elaine A. Backus
San Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center, Parlier, CA, USA
elaine.backus@usda.gov
Bill Bendena
Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Email: bendenaw@queensu.ca
Blake Bextine
University of Texas, Tyler, TX, USA
Email: BBextine@uttyler.edu
Guy Bloch
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
Email: guy.bloch@mail.huji.ac.il
Johanne Brunet
University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
Email: Johanne.Brunet@usda.gov
Luc Bussiere
University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland
Email: luc.bussiere@stir.ac.uk
Muhammad F. Chaudhury
USDA-ARS, Lincoln, NE, USA
Email: Muhammad.Chaudhury@ars.usda.gov
Joanna Chiu
University of California, Davis, CA, USA
Email: jcchiu@ucdavis.edu
Marc De Meyer
North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA
Email: marc.de.meyer@africamuseum.be
Jessica Dohmen-Vereijssen
Plant & Food Research, Christchurch, New Zealand
Email: Jessica.Dohmen-Vereijssen@plantandfood.co.nz
John Ewer
Universidad de Valparaiso, Valparaiso, Chile
Email: john.ewer@uv.cl
Konrad Fiedler
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Email: konrad.fiedler@univie.ac.at
Kris E. Godfrey
University of California - Davis, Davis, CA, USA
Email: kegodfrey@ucdavis.edu
Louis S. Hesler
USDA-ARS-NCARL, Brookings, SD, USA
Email: louis.hesler@ars.usda.gov
Fangneng Huang
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA
Email: fhuang@agcenter.lsu.edu
Marcelo Jacobs-Lorena
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
Email: mlorena@jhsph.edu
Stefan Jaronski
USDA-ARS, Sidney, MT, USA
Email: stefan.jaronski@ars.usda.gov
Russell Jurenka
Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA
Email: rjurenka@iastate.edu
Nickolas G. Kavallieratos
Agricultural University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Email: nick_kaval@aua.gr
Sunil Kumar
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA
Email: sunil.kumar@colostate.edu
Steve Lapointe
ARS-USDA, Ft. Pierce, FL, USA
Email: Stephen.Lapointe@ARS.USDA.GOV
Norman C. Leppla, BCE
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
Email: ncleppla@ifas.ufl.edu
Erika Machtinger
Penn State University, State College, PA, USA
Email: etm10@psu.edu
Amr Mohamed
Cairo University, Giza, Egypt
mamr@sci.cu.edu.eg
Mario Muscedere
Boston University, Boston, MA, USA
Email: mario@bu.edu
Russell Naisbit
University of Fribourgh, Switzerland
Email: russell.naisbit@gmail.com
Sean O'Donnell
Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Email: so356@drexel.edu
Yoonseong Park
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA
Email: ypark@ksu.edu
Sandra Rehan
University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA
Email: sandra.rehan@gmail.com
Paola Riolo
Marche Polytechnic University, Ancona, Italy
Email: p.riolo@univpm.it
Cesar Rodriguez-Saona
Rutgers University, USA
Email: crodriguez@AESOP.Rutgers.edu
Juan Rull
Institute of Ecology AC, Veracruz, Mexico
Email: juan.rull@inecol.mx
Igor Sharakhov
Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA
Email: igor@vt.edu
Tetsuro Shinoda
Fukushima University, Fukushima, Japan
Email: tetsuro.shinoda@agri.fukushima-u.ac.jp
Daniel Swale
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA
Email: dswale@agcenter.lsu.edu
Luc Swevers
Demokritos, Athens, Greece
Email: swevers@bio.demokritos.gr
Dani Takiya
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Email: takiya@gmail.com
Yuko Ulrich
University of Lausanne
Lausanne, Switzerland
yuko.ulrich@env.ethz.ch
Julie M. Urban
Nature Research Center, Raleigh, NC, USA
Email: julie.urban@naturalsciences.org
Philippe Usseglio
University of Lorraine, Nancy, France
Email: philippe.usseglio-polatera@univ-lorraine.fr
Xioa-Wei Wang
Zhejiang University, Xihu, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
Email: xiaowei_wang@zju.edu.cn
Jianxiu Yao
Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA
Email: jianxiuy@ksu.edu
Xiao-Qiang Yu
University of Missouri, Kansas City, MO, USA
Email: Yux@umkc.edu
Jerry Zhu
USDA-Agricultural Research Service, Lincoln, NE, USA
Email: jerry.zhu@ars.usda.gov
Jurgen Ziesmann
Azusa Pacific University, Azusa, CA, USA
Email: jziesmann@apu.edu
Editorial Board
Dr. Phyllis G. Weintraub
Gilat Research Center, D.N. Negev, Israel
Email: phyllisw@agri.gov.il
Christos G. Athanassiou
University of Thessaly, Nea Ionia, Greece
Email: athanassiou@agr.uth.gr
Johanne Brunet
University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
Email: Johanne.Brunet@usda.gov
Louis S. Hesler
USDA-ARS-NCARL, Brookings, SD, USA
Email: louis.hesler@ars.usda.gov
Nickolas G. Kavallieratos
Agricultural University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Email: nick_kaval@aua.gr
Norman C. Leppla, BCE
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
Email: ncleppla@ifas.ufl.edu
Jerry Zhu
USDA-Agricultural Research Service, Lincoln, NE, USA
Email: jerry.zhu@ars.usda.gov
Managing Editor
Joshua Lancette
Entomological Society of America
3 Park Place, Suite 307
Annapolis, MD 21401-3722
Email: jlancette@entsoc.org
Director of Publications and Communications:
Matt Hudson
Entomological Society of America
3 Park Place, Suite 307
Annapolis, MD 21401-3722
Phone: 301-731-4535, ext. 3020
Email: mhudson@entsoc.org