INSTRUCTIONS TO CONTRIBUTORS
Zoological Studies publishes original
research papers in six major fields, including Behavioral
biology, Ecology, Evolution, Systematics and Biogeography, Comparative
physiology, and Animals/plants interaction. Manuscripts
are welcome from around the world, but must be written in English.
Authors who submit exceptionally long manuscripts may be asked to
defray a portion of related printing cost. Color photographs can
be printed at the author,s expense. The journal will
provide 25 free reprints of accepted articles per publication; additional
reprints are available for order at the author,s expense.
With the exception of invited review
papers, submissions must include a cover letter containing the basic
information and stating that the manuscript is based on previously
unpublished original research and has not been submitted to another
journal for publication. If the paper concerns the use of animals
or specimens in research, a statement to the effect that the author(s)
has adhered to the legal requirements of the country in which the
work was carried out or to any institutional guidelines should be
included. Authors are encouraged to provide the names and e-mail
addresses of four possible reviewers.
The Editorial Board has final authority
concerning acceptance or rejection of any manuscript. As a condition
of publication, the authors, copyright automatically
belongs to Zoological Studies. If the author(s) does not
have clear title to the copyright of any part of the manuscript,
it
sole responsibility of the author(s)
to obtain written permission from the copyright holder and present
it to the editor of Zoological Studies.
The following format guidelines should
be followed for all papers submitted.
I. Submission procedure
Manuscripts must be submitted via
e-mail as electronic files to the Editorial Office: zoolstud@gate.
sinica.edu.tw. The text should be submitted as a Microsoft Word
file and a PDF file. The MS Word file will allow a timely review
process by allowing reviewers to insert comments on the electronic
copy. Figures should be included at the end of the PDF file containing
the text, but for publication of accepted manuscripts, separate
text and figure files are requested as described below. To reduce
the PDF file size for more-efficient transmission, embed fonts,
use the“optimize”function in Adobe Acrobat (or other
program), and use no more than 300 dpi resolution for figures.
To aid the Editor in file management, please begin all filenames
with the surname of the first author; it would also be useful
to include the date: e.g., Randall_et_al_4Sep02. doc (spell out
month to avoid confusion). Important: Please place the date of
submission in the top right corner of the title page and change
the date on subsequent revisions. All corresponding authors will
receive a confirmation of receipt of the manuscript via e-mail.
Authors who have not received a confirmation within one week should
check with the editorial office. After an electronic submission
has been examined and determined to be appropriate for Zoological
Studies, it will be sent electronically to reviewers, who
will return it the same way.
Peer review involves the following
steps:
- Author submits manuscript;
- Editorial Office checks formatting;
- Chief Editor assigns a Subject Editor;
- Subject Editor assigns Reviewers;
- Reviewers submit review reports;
- Subject Editor makes recommendation;
- Chief Editor makes final decision;
and
- Author is informed of decision.
Manuscript Types
Reports: Reports are full-length papers
and should not exceed 8000 words (including tables and figure
legends).
Invited Reviews: The Chief Editor
invites an author to write a review. Invited reviews should normally
be the same length as a report.
II. Title Page
The title page should include the
manuscript title; names of all authors; address(es) of where the
research was conducted and, if different, all current addresses
of the authors including fax and e-mail if available; a short
running title of less than 40 characters; name, address, telephone,
and fax numbers where correspondence should be sent; and no more
than five keywords preferably not in the title.
III. Abstract
The abstract should be a factual condensation
of the entire paper, including a statement of purpose, a clear
description of observations and findings, and a concise presentation
of the conclusions. It should not exceed 300 words. Literature
citations should be avoid.
IV. Text
Manuscripts should include the following
sections: Abstract, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion,
Acknowledgments, References, Figures, and Tables. Begin each section
on a separate sheet. The full text of the Abstract to the References
should be double-spaced with a minimum of 1.5-inch margins.
Numbered lines should be marked through
the text to make it easier to refer to corrections in the review
process. The font of the entire manuscript
should be set to 12 point Times New Roman. Scientific binomials
should be italicized.
V. References
References should be cited in the
text using the following formats: (Smith 1992), (Smith et al.
1992), or (Smith 1978a b 13 1992, Jones 1990). Bibliographic citations
should be arranged alphabetically according to the surname of
the primary author, and formatted as in the following examples.
Aranishi F. 2005b. Rapid PCR-RFLP
method for discrimination of imported mackerel and domestic mackerel.
Mar. Biotechnol. (in press)
Chen W. 1974. Butterflies of Taiwan
in colour. Taipei: Chinese Culture Press. (in Chinese) Elzinga
A, N Alonzo. 1983. Analysis for methylated amino acids in proteins.
In CHW Hirs, SN Timasheff, eds. Methods in enzymology.
Vol. 91, Part I. New York: Academic Press, pp. 8-13.
Fishbase. 2005. A global information
system on fishes. Available at http://fishbase.sinica.edu.tw/
home. htm.
Fisher CR, JJ Childress. 1986. Translocation
of fixed carbon from symbiotic bacteria to host tissues in the
gutless bivalve Solemya reidi. Mar. Biol. 93: 59-68.
Fujioka T, H Chiba. 1988. Notes on
distributions of some Japanese butterflies. Spec. Bull. Lep. Soc.
Jap. 6: 141-149. (in Japanese with English summary)
Mills SC, JD Reynolds. 2003. The bitterling-mussel
interaction as a test case for co-evolution. J. Fish Biol. 63(Supplement
A): 84-104.
Munday PL, PJ Eyre, GP Jones. 2003.
Ecological mechanisms for coexistence of colour polymorphism in
a coral-reef fish: an experimental evaluation. Oecologia 442:
519-526.
Lee CL. 1998. A study on the feasibility
of the aquaculture of the southern bluefin tuna in Australia.
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (AFFA), Canberra,
ACT 1998, 92 pp.
Summerfelt RC, GE Hall, eds. 1987.
Age and growth in fish. Ames, IA: Iowa State University Press.
VI. Tables
Tables should not duplicate material
found in the text or in accompanying illustrations. Tables must
be numbered consecutively in the order of mention in the text,
and be described in brief but complete legends. All tables must
be typed double-spaced without vertical lines, one table per page.
All symbols (a, b, c, etc.)
and abbreviations used must be briefly
and clearly explained in the table footnotes. Asterisks should
be used to indicate levels of significance: a single asterisk
(*) for p ≤ 0.05, double asterisks (**) for p
≤ 0.01, and triple asterisks (***) for p ≤ 0.001).
VII. Figures
Figures should be in the following
format.
- Figures must be in finished form
and ready for reproduction.
- Number the figures using Arabic numerals
according to the order of mention in the text.
- Appropriate lettering and labeling
should be used with letters and numbers which will be at least
1.5
mm high in the final reproduction.
4. The Font of the lettering should
be Arial. All figures should be one or two column widths (either
8 or
17 cm) in size. The maximum printed
page height is 23 cm. Include scale bars where appropriate. Color
and
grayscale photograph should be saved
in EPS format.
5. Color photographs should be at
a resolution of 300 pixels/inch. Grayscale photographs should
be saved in 8 bits/channel. Photographs should be saved in CMYK
which is suitable for printing. Do not save the format in indexed
color.
- Line drawings should be prepared in
TIFF format at a resolution of 1200 pixels/inch. Figures are
edited using EXCEL, so please provide the original files.
- Authors should prepare any TIFF-or
EPS-formatted figures at the intended final size which is suitable
for editing, and also prepare figures with no labels or words
after the manuscript is accepted.
- If all parts of a figure can be clearly
seen in the printed version, then this is a good indication
that the figure will be acceptable.
9. The maximum size for all originals
should not exceed the size of a printed page. High-quality original
artwork or glossy prints should be
submitted for reproduction mounted on appropriate mounting cards.
10. Authors may indicate their size
preferences of each figure (i.e., two-column width,“do not
reduce,”etc.). All lines must be dark and sharply drawn.
Reproductions may be used for review copies of a manuscript.
VIII. Figure Legends
Each figure should be accompanied
by a title and explanatory figure legend. All associated descriptive
legends should be typed (double-spaced)
on a separate sheet; sufficient detail should be given in each
legend to understand the figure independent
of the text.
IX. Nucleotide and Protein Sequences
Newly reported nucleotide and protein
sequences must be deposited in the DDBJ/EMBC/GenBank databases.
Accession numbers must be included in the final version of the
manuscript.
X. Special Notes on Taxonomic Papers
Taxonomic papers submitted to Zoological
Studies will be considered by the uniqueness of the taxa under
study (e.g., a poorly described taxonomic group). Authors describing
a new species are encouraged to incorporate a revision of that
particular group or relationships to existing species. Simple
taxonomic descriptions are no longer considered for publication
in Zoological Studies. Those papers submitted to Zoological
Studies should follow the following style conventions.
1. Upon the first mention of a species
or infra-familial in both the abstract and text, the author of
the animal taxon must be cited referring to the International
Code of Zoological Nomenclature. Do not abbreviate the generic
name of a taxon upon first mention or at the beginning of a sentence.
Author,s names of a taxon must not be abbreviated except
for Linnaeus (as L.) and Fabricius (as Fabr.). When multiple authorships
are involved, authors, names should be separated by“et”or“and”.
When citing authors of a taxon, citation of the year is optional.
If used, however, the year must be enclosed within parentheses
or square brackets, and the citation must be considered a reference
citation within the article and be listed in the references.
2. New taxa or synonymies that are
erected should be clearly and appropriately marked as: comb. nov.,
com. rev., nom. nov., sp. nov., stat. nov., stat. rev., syn. nov.,
etc. A new taxon must list the name of the describing author(s)
after the binomial or trinomial, even if it is the same as the
manuscript author(s).
3. Types: Descriptions and revisions
also require comments on the types involved. Comments on types
should be in a separate paragraph,
and should include collection data and deposition information.
4. Keys: Keys are not essential in
taxonomic work, but are highly recommended. Keys must be concise,
clear, easy to follow, and have reversibility provisions. Keys
must also be in adjacent couplet style, and each couplet should
preferably contain more than a single, non-overlapping attribute.
5. Materials examined: Holotype and
paratype(s) must be designated if a new taxon is being published.
Designation of an allotype is not
necessary. The collecting site, number of specimens examined,
sex, date,
and collector should be stated.
6. The result section of the systematic
papers should be in the order of scientific name, synonyms, Material
examined (inc. holotype and paratype), Etymology, Diagnosis, Description
(inc. Measurements), then a Distribution. The Discussion section
should be included at the end of main text.