期刊缩写 ECOGRAPHY
期刊全称 ECOGRAPHY
期刊ISSN 0906-7590
2013-2014最新影响因子 4.207
期刊官方网站 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecography_(journal)
期刊投稿网址
通讯方式 WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC, COMMERCE PLACE, 350 MAIN ST, MALDEN, USA, MA, 02148
涉及的研究方向 环境科学-生态学
出版国家 DENMARK
出版周期 Bimonthly
出版年份 1992
年文章数 132
Edited By: Miguel Araújo. Deputy Editors-in-Chief Nathan Sanders, Jens-Christian Svenning and Catherine Graham
Impact Factor: 4.207
ISI Journal Citation Reports ? Ranking: 2013: 6/41 (Biodiversity Conservation); 25/140 (Ecology)
Online ISSN: 1600-0587
Ecography is a journal issued by the Nordic Ecological Society Oikos representing ecologists in Denmark Finland Iceland Norway and Sweden. Ecologists from all countries are invited to publish original results on its pages.
Ecography is a bimonthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Nordic Society Oikos covering the field of spatial ecology. It has been published since 1978, the first 14 volumes under the name Holarctic Ecology.
Ecography is published in collaboration with Oikos, Journal of Avian Biology, Nordic Journal of Botany, Lindbergia, and with the monograph series Ecological Bulletins.
According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2011 impact factor 5.128, ranking it 3th[clarification needed] out of 40 journals in the category "Biodiversity Conservation" and 16th out of 136 journals in the category "Ecology".
Ecography publishes papers focused on broad spatial and temporal patterns, particularly studies of population and community ecology, macroecology, biogeography, and ecological conservation. Studies in ecological genetics and historical ecology are welcomed in the context of explaining contemporary ecological patterns. Manuscripts are expected to address general principles in ecology, though they may do so using a specific model system if this frames the problem relative to a generalised ecological issue.
Papers in Ecography are expected to be based on concise hypotheses or to relate to concise theoretical concepts based on sound natural history. Purely descriptive papers are considered only if breaking new ground and/or describing patterns seldom explored. Papers are judged by virtue of their originality, appeal to general interest, and their contribution to new developments in ecological research concerning spatial and temporal patterns. There is no bias with regard to taxon, biome, or biogeographical area.
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