Authors Guidelines
Main Text
Due to the double-blind peer review system, you have to submit your manuscript (apart from the letter to the editor and supplementary material) as two separate files (for further details, see under Submission Guidelines):
(i) Cover part (with personal information)
Authors and Affiliations: Provide the complete names of all authors, and their addresses for correspondence, including e.g., institutional affiliation (e.g. university, institute), location (street, boulevard), city, state/province (if applicable), and country. One of the authors should be designated as the corresponding author. It is the corresponding author's responsibility to ensure that the author list, and the individual contributions to the study are accurate and complete. If the article has been submitted on behalf of a consortium, all consortium members and their affiliations should be listed after the Acknowledgements section.
(ii) Main part (anonymised)
Title: The title should be in a sentence case (only scientific, geographic or person names should be with a first capital letter, i.e. Elater ferrugineus L., Germany, etc.), and should include an accurate, clear and concise description of the reported work, avoiding abbreviations. The higher taxa within the title should be separated with commas and not with a semicolon, e.g.: (Coleoptera, Elateridae, Elaterini).
Abstract and Keywords: Please have your abstract and keywords ready for input into the submission module. Keywords should be in alphabetical order and ideally differ from the words used in the title.
Body Text: All papers should be in grammatically correct English. Authors are asked to certify that their manuscripts are written in fluent English or edited by a professional English language editor prior to submission. Use either British/Commonwealth or American English provided that the language is consistent within the paper. A manuscript must be written with precision, clarity, and economy. The voice - active or passive - and the tense used should be consistent throughout the manuscript. Avoid the use of parenthetical comments and italics or bold for emphasis. This Journal discourages the use of quotation marks except for direct quotations, words defined by the author, and words used in unusual contexts. Short quotations should be embedded in the text and enclosed in double quotation marks ("). Long quotations should be on a separate line, italicized, but without quotation marks. Single quotation marks are to be used only for a quotation that occurs within another quotation.
Spacing, Fonts, and Page Numbering: Single-space all material (text, quotations, figure legends, tables, references, etc.). Separate paragraphs with a blank line. Use a 12-point font (preferably Times New Roman or Arial).
Capitals: First capital letters should be used only in the beginning of a sentence, in proper names and in headings and subheadings, as well as to indicate tables, graphs and figure/s within the text. Software programmes should be written with capital letters (e.g., ANOVA, MANOVA, PAUP).
Italicization/Underlining: Scientific names of species and genera, long direct quotations and symbols for variables and constants (except for Greek letters), such as p, F, U, T, N, r, but not for SD (standard deviation), SE (standard error), DF (degrees of freedom) and NS (non significant) should be italicized. These symbols in illustrations and equations should be in italics to match the text. Italics should not be used for emphasis, and not in abbreviations such as e.g., i.e., et al., etc., cf. Underlining of any text is not acceptable.
Abbreviations: Abbreviations should be followed by ‘.' (full stop or period; for instance: i.e., e.g., cf., etc.). Note that you shouldn't add a full stop at the end of abbreviated words if the last letter of the abbreviation is the same as the last letter of the full word. For example, you should abbreviate "Eds", "Dr", "Mr" without full stop at the end. All measures, for instance mm, cm, m, s, L, should be written without full stop.
On the use of dashes: (1) Hyphens are used to link words such as personal names, some prefixes and compound adjectives (the last of which vary depending on the style manual in use) (2) En-dash or en-rule (the length of an 'n') is used to link spans. In the context of our Journal en-dash should be used to link numerals, sizes, dates and page numbers (e.g., 1977–1981; figs 5–7; pp. 237–258); geographic or name associations (Murray–Darling River; a Federal–State agreement); and character states combinations such as long–pubescent or red–purple. (3) Em-dash or em-rule (the length of an 'm') should be used rarely, only for introducing a subordinate clause in the text that is often used much as we use parentheses. In contrast to parentheses an em-dash can be used alone. En-dashes and em-dashes should not be spaced.
Footnotes: Avoid footnotes in the body text of the manuscript. It is always possible to incorporate the footnote into the main text by rewording the sentences, which greatly facilitates reading. Additionally, footnotes are not always handled well by the journal software, and their usage may cause a failure of submission. Footnotes are acceptable only below tables; instead of numbers, please use (in order): †, ‡, §, |, ¶, #, ††, ‡‡, §§, ||, ¶, ##.
Units: Use the International System of Units (SI) for measurements. Consult Standard Practice for Use of the International System of Units (ASTM Standard E−380−93) for guidance on unit conversions, style, and usage.
Statistics: Use leading zeroes with all numbers, including probability values (e.g., P < 0.001). For every significant F−statistic reported, provide two df values (numerator and denominator). Whenever possible, indicate the year and version of the statistical software used.
Web (HTML) links: Authors are encouraged to include links to other Internet resources in their article. This is especially encouraged in the reference section. When inserting a reference to a web-page, please include the http:// portion of the web address.
Supplementary files: Larger datasets can be uploaded separately as Supplementary Files. Tabular data provided as supplementary files can be uploaded as an Excel spreadsheet (.xls), as an OpenOffice spreadsheets (.ods) or comma separated values file (.csv). As with all uploaded files, please use the standard file extensions.
Headings and subheadings: Main headings: The body text should be subdivided into different sections with appropriate headings. Where possible, the following standard headings should be used: Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusions, Acknowledgements, References. These headings need to be in bold font on a separate line and start with a first capital letter. Please do not number headings or subheadings.
- Introduction − The motivation or purpose of your research should appear in the Introduction, where you state the questions you sought to answer, and then provide some of the historical basis for those questions.
- Materials and methods − Provide sufficient information to allow someone to repeat your work. A clear description of your experimental design, sampling procedures, and statistical procedures is especially important in papers describing field studies, simulations, or experiments. If you list a product (e.g., animal food, analytical device), supply the name and location of the manufacturer. Give the model number for equipment used. Supply complete citations, including author (or editor), title, year, publisher, and version number, for computer software mentioned in your article.
The section "Materials and methods" should be described by structure, for example:- Compounds under study.
- Animals. In the section, you must specify the number of the ethical research protocol and the date of its approval.
- Experimental research models.
- Statistical analysis.
- Results − Results should be stated concisely and without interpretation.
- Discussion − Focus on the rigorously supported aspects of your study. Carefully differentiate the results of your study from data obtained from other sources. Interpret your results, relate them to the results of previous research, and discuss the implications of your results or interpretations. Point out results that do not support speculations or the findings of previous research, or that are counter-intuitive. You may choose to include a Speculation subsection in which you pursue new ideas suggested by your research, compare and contrast your research with findings from other systems or other disciplines, pose new questions that are suggested by the results of your study, and suggest ways of answering these new questions.
- Conclusion −This should state clearly the main conclusions of the research and give a clear explanation of their importance and relevance. Summary illustrations may be included.
- References − The list of References should be included after the final section of the main article body. A blank line should be inserted between single-spaced entries in the list. Authors are requested to include links to online sources of articles, whenever possible!
Where possible, the standard headings should be used in the order given above. Additional headings and modifications are permissible.
Subordinate headings: Subordinate headings (e.g. Field study and Simulation model or Counts, Measurements and Molecular analysis), should be left-justified, italicized, and in a regular sentence case. All subordinate headings should be on a separate line.
English Language Editing
This journal has well-defined policies for English language editing.
Authors are required to have their manuscripts written in fluent English or edited by a professional English language editor BEFORE submission. Authors have to confirm by checking a tick box in the submission process that they have followed the above requirement:
"The text is edited by a professional English language editor, duly acknowledged in the manuscript. I am aware that non-edited manuscripts could be rejected prior to peer-review".
The submission process includes an option to request a professional linguistic editing.
The authors are NOT obliged to use Journal's linguistic services, but they must ensure that their manuscripts have passed a proper linguistic editing before submission.
Citations and References
Citations within the text: Before submitting the manuscript, please check each citation in the text against the References and vice-versa to ensure that they match exactly.
Citations in the text should be formatted as follows:
One author: Smith (1990) or (Smith 1990)
Note: The citations format depends on the way it is incorporated within the article’s text:
Example:
- According to Smith (1990), these findings…
- These findings have been first reported in the beginning of the nineties (Smith 1990).
Two authors: Brock and Gunderson (2001) or (Brock and Gunderson 2001)
Note: When choosing between formats refer back to examples above.
Three or more authors: Smith et al. (1998) or (Smith et al. 1998)
Note: When choosing between formats refer back to examples above.
When citing more than one source, in-text citations should be ordered by the year of publication, starting with the earliest one:
(Smith et al. 1998, 2000, 2016; Brock and Gunderson 2001; Felt 2006).
Note: When you have a few citations from the same author but from different years (such as the case with Smith et al. above), the first year is taken into consideration when ordering the sources (in this case 1998, which is why Smith et al. come first in the list).
When having two or more fully identical citations (this can happen when you have more than one reference with exactly the same authors and years for one or two authors, or the same first author and year for author teams of three or more), the references are distinguished by adding the letters 'a', 'b', 'c', etc. after the years and this marking is followed in the in-text citations, respectively:
(Reyes-Velasco et al. 2018a, Reyes-Velasco et al. 2018b)
References: It is important to format the references properly, because all references will be linked electronically as completely as possible to the papers cited. It is desirable to add a DOI (digital object identifier) number for either the full-text or title and abstract of the article as an addition to traditional volume and page numbers. If a DOI is lacking, it is recommended to add a link to any online source of an article. Please use the following style for the reference list (or download the Pensoft EndNote style): here. It is also available in Zotero, when searched by journal name.
Published Papers:
Polaszek A, Alonso-Zarazaga M, Bouchet P, Brothers DJ, Evenhuis NL, Krell FT, Lyal CHC, Minelli A, Pyle RL, Robinson N, Thompson FC, van Tol J (2005) ZooBank: the open-access register for zoological taxonomy: Technical Discussion Paper. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 62: 210-220.
Accepted Papers:
Same as above, but ''in press'' appears instead the year in parentheses.
Electronic Journal Articles:
Mallet J, Willmott K (2002) Taxonomy: renaissance or Tower of Babel? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18 (2): 57-59. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0169-5347(02)00061-7.
Paper within conference proceedings:
Orr AG (2006) Odonata in Bornean tropical rain forest formations: Diversity, endemicity and applications for conservation management. In: Cordero Rivera A (Ed) Forest and Dragonflies. Fourth WDA International Symposium of Odonatology, Pontevedra (Spain), July 2005. Pensoft Publishers, Sofia-Moscow, 51-78.
Book chapters:
Mayr E (2000) The biological species concept. In: Wheeler QD, Meier R (Eds) Species Concepts and Phylogenetic Theory: A Debate. Columbia University Press, New York, 17-29.
Books:
Goix N, Klimaszewski J (2007) Catalogue of Aleocharine Rove Beetles of Canada and Alaska. Pensoft Publishers, Sofia-Moscow, 166 pp.
Book with an institutional author:
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (1999) International code of zoological nomenclature. Fourth Edition. London: The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature.
PhD thesis:
Dalebout ML (2002) Species identity, genetic diversity and molecular systematic relationships among the Ziphiidae (beaked whales). PhD thesis, Auckland, New Zealand: University of Auckland.
Link/URL:
BBC News: Island leopard deemed new species http://news.bbc.co.uk/
Citations of Public Resource Databases: It is highly recommended all appropriate datasets, images, and information to be deposited in public resources. Please provide the relevant accession numbers (and version numbers, if appropriate). Accession numbers should be provided in parentheses after the entity on first use. Examples of such databases include, but are not limited to:
- ZooBank (www.zoobank.org)
- Morphbank (www.morphbank.net)
- Genbank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genbank)
- BOLD (www.barcodinglife.org)
Providing accession numbers to data records stored in global data aggregators allows us to link your article to established databases, thus integrating it with a broader collection of scientific information. Please hyperlink all accession numbers through the text or list them directly after the References in the online submission manuscript.
All journal titles should be spelled out completely and should NOT be italicized.
Provide the publisher's name and location when you cite symposia or conference proceedings; distinguish between the conference date and the publication date if both are given. Do not list abstracts or unpublished material in the References. They should be quoted in the text as personal observations, personal communications, or unpublished data, specifying the exact source, with date, if possible. When possible, include URLs for articles available online through library subscription or individual journal subscription, or through large international archives, indexes and aggregators, e.g., PubMedCentral, Scopus, CAB Abstracts, etc. URLs for pdf articles that are posted on personal websites only should be avoided.
Authors are encouraged to cite in the References list the publications of the original descriptions of the taxa treated in their manuscript.
Ordering references: All references should be ordered alphabetically.
If the references have the same first author and a varying number of co-authors, the ordering should be based on the number of co-authors starting with the lowest as follows:
Smith J (2018) Article Title. Journal Name 1: 1-10. https://doi.org/10.3897
Smith J, Gunderson A (2017) Article Title. Journal Name 1: 10-20. https://doi.org/10.3897
Smith J, Gunderson A, Brock B (2015) Article Title. Journal Name 1: 20-30. https://doi.org/10.3897
In the occasion of more than one article from the same first author within any of the categories above, the references should be ordered chronologically.
If both the first author and year of publication match within the categories above, the references are distinguished by adding the letters 'a', 'b', 'c', etc. after the year of publication and this marking is followed in the in-text citations, respectively.
Illustrations, Figures and Tables
Figures and illustrations are accepted in the following image file formats:
- EPS (preferred format for diagrams)
- TIFF (at least 300dpi resolution, with LZW compression)
- PNG (preferred format for photos or images)
- JPEG (preferred format for photos or images)
- GIF
- BMP
- SVG
Vector files in any of the following formats EPS, SVG or PDF are requested for phylogenetic trees and cladograms.
The Journal is printed in B5 paper size with the maximum printing area of 128 mm × 199 mm. Whenever possible, individual figures should be prepared as composite figures.
Should you have any problems in providing the figures in one of the above formats, or in reducing the file below 20 MB, please contact the Editorial Office at rr_pharmacology@bsu.edu.ru
Figure legends: All figures should be referenced consecutively in the manuscript; legends should be listed consecutively immediately after the References. For each figure, the following information should be provided: Figure number (in sequence, using Arabic numerals − i.e. Figure 1, 2, 3 etc.); short title of figure (maximum 15 words); detailed legend, up to 300 words.
Illustrations of measurable morphological traits should bear mute scale bars, whose real size is to be given in the figure captions.
Please note that it is the responsibility of the author(s) to obtain permission from the copyright holder to reproduce figures or tables that have previously been published elsewhere.
Figure citations in the text should always be with Capital "F" and En-dash for ranges. One figure with a full stop, figures without.
Example: Fig. 1, Figs 1–3, Fig. 2A–E.
Citations of figures from other publications should always be Lower Case (fig. / figs). When two subsequent figures or parts are cited (for instance figures 1 and 2 or A and B), a comma should be used.
Example: Figs 1, 2 and Fig. 1A, B.
Parts belong to one figure.
Example: Fig. 1A, B and Fig. 2A-E.
On the use of Google Maps
All uses of Google Maps and Google Earth Content must provide attribution to Google, according to Google Maps/Earth Additional Terms of Service (see also Permission Guidelines for Google Maps and Google Earth). The attribution should be visible on each map in the form, for example: "Map data 2019 (C) Google".
Tables: Each table should be numbered in sequence using Arabic numerals (i.e. Table 1, 2, 3 etc.). Tables should also have a title that summarizes the whole table, maximum 15 words. Detailed legends may then follow, but should be concise.
Small tables can be embedded within the text, in portrait format (note that tables on a landscape page must be reformatted onto a portrait page or submitted as additional files). These will be typeset and displayed in the final published form of the article. Such tables should be formatted using the 'Table object' in a word processing program to ensure that columns of data are kept aligned when the file is sent electronically for review. Do not use tabs to format tables or separate text. All columns and rows should be visible, please make sure that borders of each cell display as black lines. Colour and shading should not be used; neither should commas be used to indicate decimal values. Please use a full stop to denote decimal values (i.e., 0.007 cm, 0.7 mm).
Larger datasets can be uploaded separately as Supplementary Files. Tabular data provided as supplementary files can be uploaded as an Excel spreadsheet (.xls), as an OpenOffice spreadsheets (.ods) or comma-separated values file (.csv). As with all uploaded files, please use the standard file extensions.
Supplementary Files
Online publishing allows an author to provide datasets, tables, video files, or other information as supplementary information, greatly increasing the impact of the submission. Uploading of such files is possible in Step 6 of the submission process.
The maximum file size for each Supplementary File is 20 MB.
The Supplementary Files will not be displayed in the printed version of the article but will exist as linkable supplementary downloadable files in the online version.
While submitting a supplementary file the following information should be completed:
- File format (including name and a URL of an appropriate viewer if format is unusual)
- Title of data
- Description of data
All supplementary files should be referenced explicitly by file name within the body of the article, e.g. 'See supplementary file 1: Movie 1" for the original data used to perform this analysis.
Ideally, the supplementary files should not be platform-specific, and should be viewable using free or widely available tools. Suitable file formats are:
For supplementary documentation:
- PDF (Adobe Acrobat)
For animations:
- SWF (Shockwave Flash)
For movies:
- MOV (QuickTime)
- MPG (MPEG)
For datasets:
- XLS (Excel spreadsheet)
- CSV (Comma separated values)
- ODS (OpenOffice spreadsheets)
As for images, file names should be given in the standard file extensions. This is especially important for Macintosh users, since the Mac OS does not enforce the use of standard file extensions. Please also make sure that each additional file is a single table, figure or movie (please do not upload linked worksheets or PDF files larger than one sheet).
Revising Your Article
Authors must submit the revised version of the manuscript using Track Changes/Comments tools of Word so that the Subject Editor can see the corrections and additions.
Authors must address all critiques of the referees in a response letter to the editor and submit it along with the revised manuscript through the online editorial system. In case a response letter is not submitted by the authors, the editor has the right to reject the manuscript without further evaluation. When resubmitting a manuscript that has been previously rejected with resubmission encouraged, authors must include the response letter to the article text file, and the pdf review version, so that it gets to the Subject Editor and the reviewers during the peer review.
When submitting corrections to proofs (during the layout stage), authors must upload the latest proof (in PDF format) containing their revisions as track changes.
Concise Copyediting Instructions
The copyediting instructions below represent a concise summary of the Journal's formatting requirements. The instructions are intended for use by the authors during preparation of the final revised versions of their manuscripts, technical editors, copy editors and typesetters.
Author names
- Omit titles, degrees, etc.
- Provide ORCID if available
Affiliation
(Department,) Institution, City, Country
Article title
Title of article: Subtitle of article
- Title: Sentence case
- Colon between title and subtitle (if any)
- No footnotes
- No bold (use when needed sub-/superscript, and/or italics only for the terms in Latin)
- Higher taxa within the title should be separated with commas and not with a semicolon
Running head
- A short version of title up to 50 characters (including spaces); normally the short title should have been suggested by the authors and checked for clarity by the copy editor
Abstract
- No references to tables, figures, etc., no footnotes
- No citations (preferably)
- If citations unavoidable: Complete citations, allowing unambiguous identification of cited publication!
- Should be written consistently in either third or first person
- Note: The abstract has to be a stand-alone entity, to present a really well written and concise summary of the article! A special care for copy editors to check!
- Designations of nomenclatural novelties should be in bold and spelled in the way suggested (sp. nov., gen. nov., comb. nov.)
Keywords (up to 8 words)
keyword a, keyword b, keyword n
- Do not repeat words from the title
- Listed in alphabetical order and separated by commas
- Lowercase letters, except proper names
- No bold font
- Without any punctuation marks after last keyword
Tables
- Table caption: Start with label "Table N." in bold. Sentence case, i.e.:
- Table 2. Table caption text.
- Numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals
- Heading for every column (including the leftmost!)
- No shading of cells, rows, columns; no colored fonts
- No horizontal or vertical lines in table body
- Same number of decimal places for same statistics (usually within same column)
- Text formatting in the cell without paragraph and line break
- Table must be in an editable format (.docx, .xlsx, etc., not as images)
- Caption and footnotes as texts (not as part of a table)
Figures
- Figure caption: Start with label "Figure N." in bold. Sentence case, i.e.:
- Figure 6. Figure caption text.
- Numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals
- Figure parts: Use capital letters in bold. No punctuation separator, i.e.:
- Figure 1. Figure general caption text. A part caption text B part caption text N part caption text.
- If abbreviations are used, these are placed after the parts with a colon, i.e.:
Abbreviations: xxxx - If there are scale bars on the figure parts, reference to them is last and in the format: Scale bars: 20 μm (D, N, O, Q); 50 μm (F, K); 10 μm (G, P); 5 μm (H); 100 μm (M).
- High quality (at least 300 dpi)
- Text sharp and readable (e.g., no overlap of text and graphical elements like lines)
- White or transparent background
- No image border
- Caption as text (not as part of the image)
Capitalization
- Article title: Sentence case
- Running head: Sentence case
- Section and subsection titles:
- For separated titles (usually H1-H3): Sentence case
- For paragraph titles (usually H4): Sentence case
- Table captions: Sentence case
- Headings of table rows and columns:
- Sentence case or lower case (check for consistency only!)
- Figure captions: Sentence case
- In text body: Nouns followed by numerals/letters (citations of figures, tables, appendices and supplementary files) e.g.:
- Fig. 4; Figs 1, 2; Table 2; Appendix 1
- In text body: Titles of articles, book chapters, books, tests
- In references: Sentence case
Equations and statistical symbols
- Typeface
- standard typeface for Greek letters, sub-/superscripts, and abbreviations that are not variables
- italic typeface for all other statistical symbols
- Space before and after equal/inequality signs
- Same number of decimal places for decimal values
- Use leading zeros before a decimal fraction including for statistical values pertaining to probability
Text body
- Regular font usage:
- Main text
- Abbreviations e.g., i.e., et al., etc., cf., vs.
- Greek letter e.g., α, β, γ, δ, ε, σ, φ, χ, ω
- Italic font usage:
- Scientific names of taxa of species and genera (authorities in regular font, not in italics)
- Long direct quotations
- Symbols for variables and constants, such as p, F, U, T, N, r, but not for SD (standard deviation), SE (standard error), DF (degrees of freedom), and NS (non significant). These symbols in illustrations and equations should be in italics to match the text.
- Do not use italics for emphasis
- No underlining
- Bold font usage:
- Subheadings, sections and subsections
- Figure captions – For the label and designation of figure’s parts:
- Figure 1. Figure general caption text. A part caption text B part caption text N part caption text.
- Table captions – For the label:
- Table 1. Table caption text.
- In systematic sections for specimen designation such us: holotype, paratype, syntype, lectotype, isotype, etc.
- Abbreviations of institutions or morphological characters or indices listed alphabetically in the section Materials and methods, i.e.:
- NHML Natural History Museum, London
- MW Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna
- EL length of elytra
- EW maximum width of elytra
- TL total length (PL+EL)
- In species descriptions – designation of main anatomical structures followed by a colon mark, i.e. Head:…, Thorax:…, Legs:…, Abdomen:…, etc., in this case these should be followed by a section describing other anatomical organs and structures attached to these.
- Subsection "Specimens examined" - the preferred order is as follows, HOWEVER THESE FINE-GRAINED FORMATTING GUIDELINES ARE NOT COMPULSORY. Authors who follow the guidelines will benefit from the submission of their specimen records to GBIF after publication. The records on GBIF will bear the article citation details contributiing to a wider dissemination and re-use of the published data.
- COUNTRY • specimens [e.g. 1 ♂, size ]; geographic/locality data [from largest to smallest]; coordinates; altitude/elevation/depth [using alt./m a.s.l. etc.]; date [format: 16 Jan. 1998]; collector [followed by "leg."]; other collecting data [e.g. micro habitat/host/method of collecting]; barcodes/identifiers [e.g. GenBank: MG779236]; institution code and specimen code [e.g. CBF 06023].
For Example: Holotype: CHINA • ♀; Sichuan, Kangding; 30.04°N, 101.57°E; 15.VI.2017; Yanzhou Zhang leg.; Hyp-2018-06, original number ZYZ-2017-28. Paratypes: CHINA • 1♀1♂; Sichuan, Kangding; 29.VI.2017; Yanzhou Zhang leg.; Hyp-2018-01, Hyp-2018-02, original number ZYZ-2017-08 • 1♀; Sichuan: Kangding; 2.VIII.2017; Yanzhou Zhang leg.; Hyp-2018-03, original number ZYZ-2017-20 • 1♂, Sichuan: Kangding; 29.VI.2017; Yanzhou Zhang leg.; Hyp-2018-08, original number ZYZ-2017-029. - Punctuation:
A bullet point "•" (unicode: 2022) is used to signify the beginning of a material citation. Within each citation, the different fields are delimited by a semicolon. A single field can be composed of several elements, which are separated by commas (e.g. the details region, area, town and street for the ‘locality’ field). Semicolons should not be used elsewhere in a material citation. - Repetitive data: Authors can indicate repetitive data with indications such as "same data as for holotype", "same data as for preceding", "same locality", "ibid", etc. as long as the same method and wording are used consistently throughout the paper.
- COUNTRY • specimens [e.g. 1 ♂, size ]; geographic/locality data [from largest to smallest]; coordinates; altitude/elevation/depth [using alt./m a.s.l. etc.]; date [format: 16 Jan. 1998]; collector [followed by "leg."]; other collecting data [e.g. micro habitat/host/method of collecting]; barcodes/identifiers [e.g. GenBank: MG779236]; institution code and specimen code [e.g. CBF 06023].
- Quotation marks
- Avoid quotation marks except for direct quotations, words defined by the author, and words used in unusual contexts.
- Short quotations should be embedded in the text and enclosed in double quotation marks ("). Long quotations should be on a separate line, italicized, but without quotation marks.
- Single quotation marks are to be used only for a quotation that occurs within another quotation.
- Hyphen and dash characters
- Consistent use of (-, –, —).
- In contrast to parentheses an em-dash can be used alone.
- En-dashes and em-dashes should not be spaced.
- Hyphens (-) are used to:
- link words such as personal names, some prefixes and compound adjectives (the last of which vary depending on the style manual in use)
- En-dash (–) or en-rule (the length of an 'n') is used to:
- link spans.
- link numerals, sizes, dates and page numbers (e.g., 1977–1981; figs 5–7; pp. 237–258)
- geographic or name associations (e.g., Murray–Darling River; a Federal–State agreement)
- character states combinations (e.g., long–pubescent or red–purple).
- Em-dash (—) or em-rule (the length of an 'm') should be used rarely:
- only for introducing a subordinate clause in the text that is often used much as we use parentheses.
- Hyphens (-) are used to:
Section hierarchy
- No more than 4 levels, from hierarchical level 1 (H1) to hierarchical level 4 (H4)
- Unambiguous hierarchy levels
- No numbering of hierarchical levels
Section titles
- Capitalization:
- For separated titles (usually H1-H3): Sentence case
- For paragraph titles (usually H4): Sentence case
Mandatory statements
- Funding
- If missing, add the following statement (depending on the number of authors):
- The author has no funding to report.
- The authors have no funding to report.
- If missing, add the following statement (depending on the number of authors):
- Competing interests
- If missing, add the following statement (depending on the number of authors):
- The author has declared that no competing interests exist.
- The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- If missing, add the following statement (depending on the number of authors):
- Acknowledgments (= non-financial support)
- If missing, add the following statement (depending on the number of authors):
- The author has no support to report.
- The authors have no support to report.
- If missing, add the following statement (depending on the number of authors):
- Data Resources (mandatory for empirical articles)
Geographical coordinates
One of the following formats should be used:
- Degrees, Minutes and Seconds (DMS), i.e.:
- 36°31'21"N; 114°09'50"W
- Degrees and Decimal Minutes (DDM), i.e.:
- 36°31.46'N; 114°09.84'W
- Decimal Degrees (DD), i.e.:
- 36.5243°S; 114.1641°W
- −36.5243; −114.1641 (using minus to indicate southern and western hemispheres)
In-Text Citations
- References
- 1-2 authors
- Jackson and Miller (2012) found out that...
- A recent study (Jackson and Miller 2012) confirmed that...
- 3 or more authors
- Jackson et al. (2012) found out that...
- A recent study (Jackson et al. 2012) confirmed that...
- Multiple sources in chronological order:
- same authors different years - separated by a comma:
- Jackson and Miller (2012, 2015) found out that...
- Recent studies (Jackson et al. 2012, 2015) confirmed that...
- different authors - separated by a semicolon:
- (Smith et al. 1998, 2000, 2016; Brock and Gunderson 2001; Felt 2006)
- two or more fully identical citations (the same authors and years) are distinguished by adding the letters 'a', 'b', 'c', etc. after the year:
- Jackson 2008a, 2008b
- Jackson and Miller 2014a, 2014b
- Reyes-Velasco et al. 2018a, 2018b
- same authors different years - separated by a comma:
- Sources with page numbers
- Jackson and Miller (2012: 120–121) found out that
- A recent study (Jackson and Miller 2012: 120) confirmed that
- 1-2 authors
- Figures:
- Fig. 1
- Fig. 1A, B
- Fig. 1A–D
- Figs 1, 2
- Figs 1–3
- Figs 1A, B, 3F, G, 7A
- Tables:
- Table 1
- Tables 1, 2
- Tables 1–3
- Appendixes:
- Appendix 1
- Appendices 1, 2
- Appendices 1–4
- Referenced materials from other sources:
- All figures, tables, etc., from other sources should be written with small letters i.e.: see fig. 2 in Author (Year) ...
References
- Author names: surname first; all given names abbreviated, no full stops, commas or spaces, i.e.:
- Lyal CHC
- van Tol J
- de Albuquerque PRA
- Different authors separated by comma
- Year in brackets; no comma or full stop after it
- No italics (except for Latin terms)
Published papers:
Polaszek A, Alonso-Zarazaga M, Bouchet P, Brothers DJ, Evenhuis NL, Krell FT, Lyal CHC, Minelli A, Pyle RL, Robinson N, Thompson FC, van Tol J (2005) ZooBank: The open-access register for zoological taxonomy: Technical Discussion Paper. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 62: 210–220.
Accepted papers:
Same as above, but ''in press'' appears instead of the year in parentheses.
Electronic journal articles:
Mallet J, Willmott K (2002) Taxonomy: Renaissance or Tower of Babel? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18(2): 57–59. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0169-5347(02)00061-7
Paper within conference proceedings:
Orr AG (2006) Odonata in Bornean tropical rain forest formations: Diversity, endemicity and applications for conservation management. In: Cordero Rivera A (Ed.) Forest and Dragonflies. Fourth WDA International Symposium of Odonatology, Pontevedra (Spain), July 2005. Pensoft Publishers, Sofia-Moscow, 51–78.
Book chapters:
Mayr E (2000) The biological species concept. In: Wheeler QD, Meier R (Eds) Species concepts and phylogenetic theory: A debate. Columbia University Press, New York, 17–29.
Books:
Goix N, Klimaszewski J (2007) Catalogue of Aleocharine Rove Beetles of Canada and Alaska. Pensoft Publishers, Sofia-Moscow, 166 pp.
Book with institutional author:
ICZN [International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature] (1999) International code of zoological nomenclature. Fourth Edition. The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature, London.
PhD thesis:
Dalebout ML (2002) Species identity, genetic diversity and molecular systematic relationships among the Ziphiidae (beaked whales). PhD Thesis, University of Auckland, Auckland, ## pp.
Link/URL:
BBC News (2012) Island leopard deemed new species http://news.bbc.co.uk/ [Accessed on dd.mm.yyyy]