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期刊名称:CANADIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY

ISSN:0008-4166
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA, RESEARCH JOURNALS,MONTREAL RD, OTTAWA, CANADA, K1A 0R6
  出版社网址:http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/rp2_home_e.html
期刊网址:http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/cgi-bin/rp/rp2_desc_e?cjm
影响因子:1.102(2008)
主题范畴:MICROBIOLOGY;    BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY;    BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY;    IMMUNOLOGY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 Canadian Journal of Microbiology

 

Published since 1954, this monthly journal publishes contributions by recognized scientists world-wide and has an international readership in more than 58 countries. Journal topics include applied microbiology and biotechnology; microbial structure and function; fungi and other eucaryotic protists; infection and immunity; microbial ecology; physiology, metabolism, and enzymology; virology, genetics, and molecular biology; and microbial genomics and bioinformatics.
 

Instructions to Authors

 

The Canadian Journal of Microbiology (Can. J. Microbiol.) is a widely subscribed-to international journal of general microbiology and publishes articles, notes, minireviews, reviews, and letters in English or French. Articles are reports of research in any field of microbiology and must be original new contributions to science. Notes may be brief reports of work that is largely confirmatory, advances in knowledge arising as by-products of broader studies, or descriptions of research techniques or developments in instrumentation. Notes should not be longer than 15 manuscript pages (about 4 printed pages). They should have an Abstract but should not be divided into Introduction, Materials and methods, Results, and Discussion sections. Minireviews are brief, stimulating commentaries of limited scope that provide a novel synthesis or appraisal of research results or theories. They should be written in a style suitable for a general rather than a specialist readership, should not exceed 2? printed pages, should possess an abstract, and may or may not have section headings. Like minireviews, reviews should be focused and of general, current interest, but they provide a somewhat more comprehensive, although not exhaustive treatment. Both types of review should contain a carefully selected bibliography and both are subject to the usual editorial process (see below). Letters桾he Journal also provides a forum for points of view or opinions on topical microbiological matters or on issues raised in papers that have been published in the Canadian Journal of Microbiology. These letters should be less than 500 words and contain no illustrations and no more than five references. They are reviewed by the Editorial Board but do not undergo the normal review process. Letters that take issue with published papers will be faxed to the author of the paper concerned with an invitation to reply. Upon receipt of that reply, both letters will be either approved and published together, or rejected.

In co-operation with the Canadian Global Change Program, the Canadian Journal of Microbiology welcomes submissions by authors of appropriate manuscripts dealing with microbial processes and global change. Authors are encouraged to include and formally cite the data sets on which their work is based. To preserve and make these data sets widely accessible, extensive data sets will be handled and maintained as Supplementary Material as defined below.

It is not the Canadian Journal of Microbiology抯 policy to publish papers that merely report a new DNA sequence plus some computer analyses of the data. However, we encourage you to include other data, such as complementation studies and functional studies of the expressed gene(s). For sequence papers to be considered, the authors must submit any new sequences to a database and provide an accession number with the manuscript (see below "Submission of data to databases").

Submission of data to databases ?Authors of manuscripts reporting nucleic acid sequences must submit the relevant data to either the GenBank, EMBL, or DDBJ databases, whichever is most convenient. Data can be submitted by e-mail or on diskette. Details regarding submission can be obtained from the relevant databases. Electronic mail addresses are as follows:

GenBank: gb-sub@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
EMBL: datasubs@embl-heidelberg.de
DDBJ: ddbjsub@ddbj.nig.ac.jp

The mailing address for GenBank is as follows:

GenBank Submissions
National Center for Biotechnology Information
Bldg. 38A, Room 8N-803
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, MD 20894, U.S.A.

The accession number of the sequence must be applied for before publication.

The editorial process

Authors must submit their manuscript and illustrations to

Dr. J.J. Germida or Dr. H.G. Deneer
Department of Soil Science
University of Saskatchewan
51 Campus Drive
Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8
Canada

International authors sending manuscripts to the Editorial Office via courier, please indicate on the shipment a monetary value of $10CAN (this amount represents the average assembly and packaging cost per submission package).
Reviewers are asked to evaluate the quality and significance of the work and to provide general and specific recommendations. Upon receipt of the reviews members of the Editorial Board add their own evaluation. The Editor抯 decision will be one of (i) to accept, (ii) to request a revision with or without further peer review, or (iii) to reject with or without an invitation to resubmit the paper as a new submission after the addition of new data and (or) significant rewriting. It is the policy of the Journal to allow 1 month for authors to complete revisions. Authors will be reminded once and if there is no response, the manuscript will be considered withdrawn. A high priority is placed on expediting this editorial process, which on average requires less than 10 weeks for first return to author.

There are no page charges for publication in the Canadian Journal of Microbiology.

Submission requirements

Authors must submit the following: the original manuscript, three duplicate copies, an electronic version on diskette or CD, one set of original figures or photomechanical transfers (PMTs) and three sets of high-quality photocopies, and in the case of photographs, four sets identical in quality (see Illustrations). All manuscripts must include line numbers. A covering letter should formally submit the paper for publication in the Journal and should confirm compliance with the requirements given below under Ethics, Conflict of Interest, and Use of Experimental Animals. To facilitate the review process, the author(s) must also provide two preprints of any relevant papers that have been submitted, are in press, or have been recently published. This is especially important if such papers are referred to in the manuscript.

Scientific merit and originality are the two most desirable qualities of any paper. In addition, papers must be clearly and concisely written in good English or French. Authors whose native language is not English or French should consult someone fluent in English or French prior to submission of the manuscript.

Ethics

In submitting a manuscript to the Journal the author(s) affirms that an identical or substantially similar report has not been published elsewhere nor is it in the process of being considered or published elsewhere. Authors must identify any material, figures, or tables that have been previously published. Prior publication of some content may be acceptable, but a failure to make a full disclosure is considered to be a breach of scientific ethics. Where appropriate, written permission from the holder of the copyright must be submitted with the manuscript. The corresponding author must also affirm that all of the authors have read and approved of the manuscript.

By publishing in the Journal, the authors agree that any plasmids, viruses, and living materials, such as microbial strains and cell lines newly described in the paper, are available from a national collection or will be made available in a timely fashion and at a reasonable cost to members of the scientific community for noncommercial purposes.

Conflict of interest

Submitted manuscripts should include full disclosure of funding sources for the research. When an author has received financial support from a company for the research described in a paper, that fact should be declared in the Acknowledgements section. If an author has a personal financial involvement with a company that has an interest in marketing or using a product of the research reported, this involvement should be declared in an appropriate footnote to the title. This does not apply to authors who disclose their company affiliation by reporting the address where part or all of the research was carried out. The letter of transmission should include an explanation of any real or perceived conflicts of interest that may arise during the peer review process. Failure to disclose such conflicts may lead to refusal of a submitted manuscript.

Use of experimental animals

Experiments on animals should employ the most humane methods on the smallest number of appropriate animals required to obtain valid results. In infectious disease investigations, the appropriate guideline is that 搃n the face of distinct signs that such processes are causing irreversible pain or distress, alternative endpoints should be sought to satisfy both the requirements of the study and the needs of the animal.?Authors who describe experiments with animals must include a statement in the Materials and methods section which indicates (i) that animals were cared for in accordance with approved guidelines such as the Guide to the Care and Use of Experimental Animals (Vol. 1, 2nd ed., 1993, and Vol. 2, 1984, available from the Canadian Council for Animal Care, Constitution Square, Tower 2, Suite 315, 350 Albert St., Ottawa, ON K1R 1B1, Canada) or the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (1996, published by the National Academy Press, 2101 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20055, U.S.A.); and (ii) that their use of animals was reviewed and approved by the appropriate animal care review committee at the institution(s) where the experiments were carried out.

The manuscript

Publication is facilitated if the authors very carefully check the symbols, abbreviations, and technical terms for accuracy, consistency, and readability and ensure that manuscripts and illustrations meet the requirements outlined below. NRC Research Press maintains the right to preserve the technical quality of the Journal. Authors are requested to refer to a recent issue of the Journal for details of layout, especially for tables and reference lists.

General format ?All parts of the manuscript, including footnotes, tables, captions for illustrations, and references should be typewritten, double-spaced, on one side only of white 8.5 ?11 in. paper, with margins of 1 in. Use capital letters only when the letters or words should appear in capitals in the printed paper. Double-sided copies are not acceptable. Each page of the manuscript should be numbered and each line on each page should also be numbered. Tables and captions for illustrations should be on separate pages and placed after the text.

Spelling should follow that of Webster抯 Third New International Dictionary or the Oxford English Dictionary. Authors are responsible for consistency in spelling. Authors are encouraged to have their manuscripts proofread by a colleague for grammar, style, and clarity.

Abbreviations, nomenclature, and symbols for units of measurements should conform to international recommendations. Metric units should be used or metric equivalents should be given and the use of SI units (Syst鑝e international d抲nit閟) is required. This system is explained in the Metric Practice Guide (2000) published by CSA International (178 Rexdale Blvd., Toronto, ON M9W  1R3, Canada). As a general guide for biological terms, The CBE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers: Scientific Style and Format (6th edition, 1994) published by the Council of Biology Editors, Inc., Chicago, IL 60603, U.S.A., is recommended. For enzyme nomenclature, Enzyme Nomenclature (1992): Recommendations of the Nomenclature Committee of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (Academic Press, San Diego, Calif.) should be followed. Abbreviations and contractions of the names of substances, procedures, etc., must be defined the first time they occur. Symbols and unusual or Greek characters should be identified clearly; superscripts and subscripts should be legible and carefully placed, and they should be explained by marginal notes when necessary.

The title page of the manuscript should have only the title, the authors?names, the authors?affiliations, and any necessary footnotes. The authors?addresses must be the institution(s) where the work was done. Please group each address with the respective authors?names. Do not separate names and addresses. All authors?present addresses, if different, should be footnoted for correspondence and reprints. For correspondence and reprints, the address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of the corresponding author must be indicated in a footnote. It is essential that the title be clear, concise, and informative of the paper. Running titles are not published.

Authorship ?An author should have made a substantial contribution to the overall design and execution of experiments; therefore, all authors are considered equally responsible for the entire contents of the paper. Individuals who merely provided assistance such as strains or reagents, but were not involved in the intellectual process, should be recognized in the Acknowledgements section.

An Abstract of not more than 200 words, typed on a separate page, is required. Where possible, the use of abbreviations should be avoided in the abstract. References should not be included unless they are absolutely necessary and complete bibliographic information is given. Authors who can submit abstracts in both fluent English and fluent French are encouraged to do so. Authors should provide three to five key words, which should be placed directly below the abstract.

Footnotes to material in the text should not be used unless they are unavoidable, but their use is encouraged in Tables. Where used in the text, footnotes should be designated by superscript Arabic numerals in serial order throughout the manuscript except in Tables. Each footnote should be placed at the bottom of the manuscript page where reference to it is made.

Writing numbers ?In long numbers the digits should be separated into groups of three, counted from the decimal marker to the left and right. The separator should be a space and not a comma, period, or any other mark, e.g., 25 562 987 and not 25,562,987. The decimal marker should be a point, e.g., 0.1 mL and not 0,1 mL. The decimal point in all numbers between 1 and ?, except 0, must be preceded by a 0. The sign ?should be used to indicate multiplication, e.g., 3 ?106 and not 3?06.

Equations must be set up clearly in type, triple-spaced. They should be identified by numbers in square brackets placed flush with the left margin. In numbering, no distinction is made between mathematical and chemical equations. Routine structural formulae can be typeset and need not be submitted as figures for direct reproduction, but they must be clearly depicted.

References ?The author is responsible for verifying each reference against the original article. Each reference must be cited in the text, using the surnames of the authors and the year, for example, (Green 1970) or Green and Brown (1981). Depending on the sentence construction, the names may or may not be in parentheses, but the year always is. If there are three or more authors, the citation should give the name of the first author followed by et al. (e.g., Green et al. 1969). If references occur that are not uniquely identified by the authors?names and year, use a, b, c, etc., after the year, for example, Green 1983a, 1983b; Green and Brown 1978a, 1978b, for the text citation and in the reference list.

The reference list must be double-spaced and placed at the end of the text. References must be listed in alphabetical order according to the name of the first author and not numbered. References with the same first author are listed in the following order. (i) Papers with one author only are listed first in chronological order, beginning with the earliest paper. (ii) Papers with dual authorship follow and are listed in alphabetical order by the last name of the second author. (iii) Papers with three or more authors appear after the dual-authored papers and are arranged chronologically.

References should follow the form used in current issues of the Journal. The names of serials are abbreviated in the form given in CASSI (Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index, Chemical Abstracts, P.O. Box 3012, Columbus, OH 43210, U.S.A.) or in Serial Sources for the BIOSIS Previews?/SUP> Database (BioSciences Information Service, Philadelphia, PA 19103, U.S.A.). In doubtful cases, authors should write out the name of the serial in full.

Abstracts, theses, or dissertations, work not yet published (i.e., in press), as well as letters to the editor, personal communications, and unpublished data are all allowed in the reference list as exemplified below:
Waite, R.T., and Wood, D.O. 1991. Isolation of the Rickettsia prowazekii gyrA gene.

Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol. 91st, 1991. Abstr. D-160. p. 105.
Wang, I.K. 1991. 6-Methylsalicylic acid polyketide synthetase: enzyme purification and gene cloning. Ph.D. thesis, The University of Calgary, Calgary, Alta.
Brown, M.C., and Johnson, L.W. 1991. A new method of cell breakage. J. Gen. Microbiol. In press.
Romesburg, H.C., and Mohai, P. 1991. Letter. Can. J. For. Res. 21: 1297?298.
Brown, M.C. 1995. (University of Alberta.) Personal communication.
Brown, M.C., and Johnson, L.W. 1995. (University of Alberta.) Unpublished data.

For electronic citations, the following format should be followed:

Jablonski, S. 1999. Online multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR)
 
syndromes [online]. U.S. National Library of Medicine, Medical Subject Headings Section. Available from http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/jablonski/syndrome_title.html [updated 28
September 2000; cited 8 March 2001].

Tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals, have a brief title, and be referred to in the text. Each table must be on a separate page. Vertical rules should not be used. A copy of the Journal should be consulted to see how tables are set up and where the lines in them are placed. Column headings and descriptive matter in tables should be brief. Footnotes in tables should be designated by symbols (*, ? ? ? ll, ? #) or superscript lower case italic letters. Descriptive material not designated by a footnote may be placed under a table as a Note.

Appendices ?Figures and tables used in an appendix should be numbered sequentially but separately from those used in the main body of the paper, for example, Fig. A1, Table A1, etc.

Supplementary material ?The National Research Council of Canada maintains a depository in which supplementary material such as extensive tables or data, detailed calculations, and coloured illustrations may be placed. Authors wishing to use it should submit their completed work for examination by the Editors and mark the part to be considered for deposition. For some papers, the Editors may suggest that portions be placed in the depository. When material is deposited, this is indicated by a footnote to an appropriate part of the paper. Photocopies of material in the depository may be obtained from the Depository of Unpublished Data, CISTI, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0R6, Canada.

Nomenclature of microorganisms ?Authors are required to use currently accepted names for microorganisms as indicated in International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria in 1990. A new name is not validly published until a note containing the name is also published in the International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. Microorganisms and viruses should be given strain designations consisting of letters (usually two) followed by serial numbers. It is generally advisable to use the worker抯 initials or a descriptive symbol of locate or laboratory. Each new isolate will then be given a new (serial) designation (AB1, AB2, etc.). Genotypic and phenotypic symbols should not be included.

Genetic nomenclature

Bacteria ?The use of genotypic and phenotypic designations should follow the recommendations of Demerec et al. (Genetics, 54: 61?4, 1966). (i) Phenotypic designations must be used when mutant loci have not been identified or mapped. Phenotypic designations generally consist of three-letter symbols, not italicized, with the first letter capitalized. Superscript letters may be used (e.g., Strs for streptomycin sensitivity). (ii) Genotypic designations are composed of three-letter locus symbols written in lower case italics. Wild-type alleles are indicated by positive superscripts (e.g., his+). If several loci control related functions, they are distinguished by italicized capital letters following the gene symbols (e.g., hisA, hisB). Mutation sites are indicated by putting the serial isolation numbers (allele numbers) after the locus symbol. Deviations from normal use should be defined. For more detailed information about the symbols in current use, consult reviews by Bachmann (Microbiol. Rev. 47: 180?30, 1983) for Escherichia coli K-12; Sanderson and Roth (Microbiol. Rev. 52: 485?32, 1988) for Salmonella spp.; and Henner and Hoch (Microbiol. Rev. 44: 57?2, 1980) for Bacillus subtilis.

Viruses ?In the genetic nomenclature of bacterial viruses (bacteriophages), no distinctions are made between genotype and phenotype. Genetic symbols may be one, two, or three letters.

Transposable elements and plasmids ?Nomenclature of transposable elements (transposons, Mu) should follow Campbell et al. (Gene, 5: 197?06, 1979), and for plasmids, should follow Novick et al. (Bacteriol. Rev. 40: 168?89, 1976).

Illustrations

Provide photographic reproductions, laser printouts, or the original artwork (no larger than 8.5 x 11 in.) of each illustration. Provide the original set of illustrations and three sets of copies for review purposes.

Each figure or group of figures should be planned to fit, after appropriate reduction, into the area of either one or two columns of text. The maximum finished size of a one-column illustration is 8.8 x 23.9 cm (3.5 x 9.4 in.) and that of a two-column illustration is 18.2 x 23.9 cm (7.2 x 9.4 in.). The figures (including halftones) must be numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals, and each one must be referred to in the text and must be self-explanatory. All terms, abbreviations, and symbols must correspond with those in the text. Only essential labelling should be used, with detailed information given in the caption. Each illustration must be identified by the figure number and the authors?names on the back of the page or in the left-hand corner, well away from the illustration area.

Line drawings should be made with black India ink or computer-generated in black on high-quality white paper or other comparable material. For computer-generated graphics, supply a laser print at the highest resolution available. Photocopies are not acceptable.

All lines must be sufficiently thick (0.5 points minimum) to reproduce well, and all symbols, superscripts, subscripts, and decimal points must be in good proportion to the rest of the drawing and large enough to allow for any necessary reduction without loss of detail. Avoid small open symbols; these tend to fill in upon reproduction. Lettering produced by dot matrix printers or typewriters, or by hand, is not acceptable. The same font style and lettering sizes should be used for all figures of similar size in any one paper.

Maps must have very clear, bold patterns and must show longitudes and latitudes (or UTM coordinates) and a scale. All place names and geographic features on Quebec maps must be in French only, with proper accents and capitalization.

Photographs should be continuous tone on glossy paper. Prints must be of high quality, on glossy paper, with strong contrast. The copies for reproduction should only show essential features, be trimmed, and mounted on thin flexible white bristol board with no space between those arranged in groups. A photograph, or group of them, should be planned to fit into the area of either one or two columns of text with no further reduction. Electron micrographs or photomicrographs should include a scale bar directly on the print. The best results will be obtained if the authors match the contrast and density of all figures arranged as a single plate.

Color illustrations will be at the author抯 expense. Further details on prices are available from the Managing Editor of the Journal.

NRC Research Press prefers the submission of electronic illustration files for accepted manuscripts and will use these electronic files whenever possible. If electronic files are not available, paper versions of the figures will be scanned. Note that the scanner will easily reproduce flaws (e.g., correction fluid, smudges). Submission of noncontinuous (screened) photographs and scanned illustrations printed out on laser printers is not recommended as moir閟 develop; a moir?is a noticeable, unwanted pattern generated by rescanning or rescreening an illustration that already contains a dot pattern.

Preparation of electronic illustration files

Authors must supply electronic graphic files and high-quality hard-copy originals. Electronic files (i.e., figure number and figure content) should match the originals. On the disk label, identify (i) the software application and version; and (ii) file name(s), size, and extension. If you have compressed your files, indicate what compression format was used. PC or Macintosh versions of True Type or Type 1 fonts should be used. Do not use bitmap or nonstandard fonts. Electronic graphics can be accepted on the following disks: 3?in. disks, 100 MB Zip cartridge, and CD-ROM.

All figures should be submitted at their final published size. For figures with several parts (e.g., a, b, c, d, etc.) created using the same software application, assemble them into one file rather than sending several files.

Remember that the more complex your artwork becomes, the greater the possibility for problems at output time. Avoid complicated textures and shadings, especially in vector illustration programs; this increases the chance for a poor-quality final product.

Bitmap (raster) files ?Bitmaps are image files produced using a grid format in which each square (or pixel) is set to one level of black, colour, or grey. A bitmap (rasterized) file is broken down into the number of pixels or picture elements per inch (ppi). Pixels per inch is sometimes referred to as dots per inch (dpi). The higher the resolution of an image, the larger the number of pixels contained within the rectangular grid.

The proper resolution should be used when submitting bitmap artwork. The minimum requirements for resolution are 600 dpi for line art and finelines (line art with fine lines or shading), 300 dpi for halftones and colour, and 600 dpi for combinations (halftones with lettering outside the photo area).

All colour files submitted must be as CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black). These colours are used in full-colour commerical printing. RGB graphics (red, green, and blue; colours specifically used to produce an image on a monitor) will not print correctly.

Vector files ?Vector files are image files produced using elements such as lines and shapes. Typically these files are used for line drawings.

Bitmaps inside vector files ?Bitmaps can be imported into vector/draw applications only for the purpose of adding and overlaying information, lines, text, etc. Bitmaps should not be resized, cropped, rotated, or otherwise manipulated after importing.

The preferred graphic application of NRC Research Press is CorelDraw! For other applications that can be used, see electronic graphics list at http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/cgi-bin/ps/rp2_prog_e?cjm_graphics_e.html.

The publication process

Once the paper has been accepted, subsequent correspondence should be with NRC Research Press, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0R6, Canada.

Submission of electronic copy ?Authors are requested to submit the final accepted manuscript only, both in hardcopy format and on disk. Text files and figure files should be submitted on separate disks. All disks must be labelled clearly with the authors?names. Text (including tables) should be provided both in a word-processing format (WordPerfect or Microsoft Word is preferable, IBM compatible or Macintosh) and as an ASCII file. Please identify the word-processing software, version number, and type of computer used (IBM or Macintosh). For figures, see the section "Preparation of graphic files." Include a statement in the letter accompanying the manuscript that the electronic version exactly matches the final hard copy version.

Permission to reprint ?Whenever a manuscript contains material (tables, figures, charts, etc.) that has been previously published and, hence, is protected by copyright, it is the obligation of the author to secure written permission from the holder of the copyright to reproduce the material for both the print and electronic formats. These letters must accompany the submitted manuscript.

Galley proofs ?A galley proof, illustration proofs, the copy-edited manuscript, and a reprint order form are sent to the corresponding author. Galley proofs must be checked very carefully, as they will not be proofread by NRC Research Press, and must be returned within 48 hours of receipt. The proof stage is not the time to make extensive corrections, additions, or deletions, and the cost of changes introduced at the proof stage and deemed to be excessive will be charged to the author. Questions concerning galley proofs should be addressed to Jacqueline Costigan (613-993-9038; fax: 613-952-7656; e-mail: jacqueline.costigan@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca).

Reprints ?If reprints are desired, the reprint order form must be filled out completely and returned with payment (cheque, credit card number, purchase order number, or journal voucher) together with the corrected proofs and manuscript. Orders submitted after the Journal has been printed are subject to considerably higher prices. The Journal does not provide free reprints, and reprints are not mailed until a purchase order number or payment is received.

Copyright transfer ?All authors are required to complete a copyright transfer form assigning all rights to NRC. Copyright transfer forms are available from the Editor, in the first issue of each volume, or on the web site of NRC Research Press.

Requests for permission to reproduce or republish the paper, in whole or in part, should be sent to NRC Research Press.

 


Editorial Board

 

Editors:
Dr. J.J. Germida and Dr. H.G. Deneer
Department of Soil Science
University of Saskatchewan
51 Campus Drive
Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8
Canada

Telephone: (306) 966-6879
Fax: (306) 966-6949

Assistant to the Editors:
Tracey Grand'Maison

Section Editors:
Microbial structure and function
Dr. Susan F. Koval

Fungi and other eucaryotic protists
Dr. Susan Boyetchko
Dr. James Traquair
Dr. Paul Widden

Applied microbiology and biotechnology
Dr. Julia M. Foght
Dr. Charles W. Greer
Dr. L. Brent Selinger
Dr. Richard Villemur

Infection and immunity
Dr. Nevio Cimolai

Microbial ecology
Dr. C.R. Bell

Physiology, metabolism, and enzymology
Dr. A.J. Clarke
Dr. M.F. Hynes

Virology, genetics, and molecular biology
Dr. M.S. DuBow
Dr. Peter J. Krell



Microbial genomics and bioinformatics
Editorial Office



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