自引率: 3.4%
被引量: 38175
通过率: 暂无数据
审稿周期: 暂无数据
版面费用: 暂无数据
国人发稿量: 3
投稿须知/期刊简介:
Now the highest-cited journal in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (ISI/SCI Journal Citation Reports 1996). Trends in Ecology & Evolution contains polished, concise and readable reviews, commentaries, discussions and letters in all areas of ecology and evolutionary science, thus serving as an invaluable source of information for researchers, lecturers, teachers, field workers and students. Trends in Ecology & Evolution keeps these scientists informed of new developments and ideas across the full range of ecology and evolutionary biology - from the pure to the applied, and from molecular to global. Now, more than ever before, is it necessary for life scientists to be aware of research from a wide range of disciplines, especially in the face of the gathering momentum of global environmental change and destruction. More than any other journal, Trends in Ecology & Evolution is the major forum for coverage of all the important issues concerning organisms and their environments.A sample of our recent and forthcoming topics: The new plant reproductive biology; Fungi and the evolution of the land flora; Persistence of a unicellular stage in multicellular life histories; Elevated CO2, secondary metabolism and ecosystem function; Extra-pair paternity in birds; Evolutionary consequences of indirect genetic effects; Population dynamics of large herbivores; Social evolution in toothed whales; Origins and early evolution of herbivory in tetrapods; The phylogenetic fuse and evolutionary explosions; Phylogenetic supertrees: genetic suspension feeders in marine food webs; evolution and ecology of the MHC.
期刊描述简介:
Trends in Ecology & Evolution (TREE) contains polished, concise and readable reviews, opinions and letters in all areas of ecology and evolutionary science. It serves as an invaluable source of information for researchers, lecturers, teachers, field workers and students. Trends in Ecology & Evolution keeps these scientists informed of new developments and ideas across the full range of ecology and evolutionary biology - from the pure to the applied, and from molecular to global. Now, more than ever before, is it necessary for life scientists to be aware of research from a wide range of disciplines, especially in the face of the gathering momentum of global environmental change and destruction. More than any other journal, Trends in Ecology & Evolution is the major forum for coverage of all the important issues concerning organisms and their environments. Articles for Trends in Ecology & Evolution are generally commissioned by the Editor, but ideas for articles are welcome. Prospective authors should send an abstract (120 words) and a cover letter (two pages maximum) outlining what will be discussed in the article, plus up to 20 key references by email to the Editor (tree@cell.com). The editor will supply guidelines on manuscript preparation if the proposal is accepted. The submission of completed manuscripts without prior consultation with the Editor is strongly discouraged. Authors should note that all major articles in TREE are peer-reviewed and publication cannot be guaranteed.
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The new society for modeling and theory in population biology.
被引量:- 发表:1970
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Harder, better, faster, stronger? Dispersal in the Anthropocene.
被引量:- 发表:1970
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Beyond modular enhancers: new questions in cis-regulatory evolution.
被引量:- 发表:1970
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Antarctic pelagic ecosystems on a warming planet.
被引量:- 发表:1970
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The sociality of sleep in animal groups.
Group-living animals sleep together, yet most research treats sleep as an individual process. Here, we argue that social interactions during the sleep period contribute in important, but largely overlooked, ways to animal groups' social dynamics, while patterns of social interaction and the structure of social connections within animal groups play important, but poorly understood, roles in shaping sleep behavior. Leveraging field-appropriate methods, such as direct and video-based observation, and increasingly common on-animal motion sensors (e.g., accelerometers), behavioral indicators can be tracked to measure sleep in multiple individuals in a group of animals simultaneously. Sleep proximity networks and sleep timing networks can then be used to investigate the collective dynamics of sleep in wild group-living animals.
被引量:1 发表:1970