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期刊名称:MYCOLOGIA

ISSN:0027-5514
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Bimonthly
出版社:NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN, PUBLICATIONS DEPT, BRONX, NY, 10458
  出版社网址:http://www.mycologia.org/
期刊网址:http://www.mycologia.org/
影响因子:2.359(2008)
主题范畴:MYCOLOGY

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



About the journal

Mycologia

MYCOLOGIA publishes papers on all aspects of the fungi, including lichens. Subjects appropriate to the journal are physiology and biochemistry, ecology, pathology, development and morphology, systematics, cell biology and ultrastructure, genetics, molecular biology, evolution, applied aspects, and new techniques. Publication in MYCOLOGIA is for both members and nonmembers of the Mycological Society of America. Papers appropriate for the journal are:

(i) regular articles reporting original research
(ii) notes or brief articles reporting research or new techniques
(iii) invited papers
(iv) reviews, and minireviews


Instructions to Authors

 

MYCOLOGIA publishes papers on all aspects of the fungi, including lichens. Subjects appropriate to the journal are physiology and biochemistry, ecology, pathology, development and morphology, systematics, cell biology and ultrastructure, genetics, molecular biology, evolution, applied aspects, and new techniques. Publication in MYCOLOGIA is for both members and nonmembers of the Mycological Society of America. Papers appropriate for the journal are: (i) regular articles reporting original research, (ii) notes or brief articles reporting research or new techniques, (iii) invited papers, (iv) reviews, and minireviews. Authors should consult the Editor before submitting a review manuscript.

Papers are usually limited to 10 printed pages, including tables and illustrations. Exceptions may be made at the discretion of the Editor-in-Chief. Regular articles will be published in the approximate order of their acceptance. After a manuscript has been accepted, the author will receive page proofs and a form for publication charges. Authors will be asked to pay page charges, currently $40.00. However, payment of page charges is not a condition of acceptance for publication.

GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS

Submit manuscripts to the Editor-in-Chief in triplicate (three electrostatic copies, or an original on white bond paper plus two copies), along with a disk copy (PC-compatible, MS Word). Also enclose a letter requesting publication in MYCOLOGIA signed by the author(s). Manuscripts will be assigned to an Associate Editor and reviewed by at least two reviewers. Authors are invited to suggest names of reviewers for their papers. The Editor-in-Chief will make the final decision on acceptance. When preparing your manuscript consider that you will also submit a revised disk copy as well as hard copy after the review and revision process is completed. Initially prepare your manuscript as follows:

  • Neatly typed, clean copy is required. Double space throughout (all parts, including title, addresses, footnotes, legends, tables, literature citations, etc.).
  • Use line number guides (left margin) for review copies, but remove them from the final disk copy.
  • Identify each page (other than the first) with the first author抯 name and the page number in the top right margin.
  • Leave at least a 2.5 cm margin on all sides.
  • All text must be left aligned so that the right margin is uneven (not justified).
  • Do not divide words by hyphens at line ends.
  • Do not place page breaks between sections except for tables. Tables should be removed from the final disk file.
  • Paragraph indents should be consistent throughout the file. Use either the tab key or paragraph indent, not multiple spaces.
  • Primary headings should be flush left; remove your word processor's "Center" command.
  • Remove all extra vertical space above or below titles, headings or paragraphs. These will be produced by the typesetting codes at the press.
  • Do not use hanging indents in the LITERATURE CITED. Place an extra line feed (paragraph mark) between references for improved legibility on the manuscript.
  • Boldface, italic, small caps, subscript and superscript commands should be retained. These are normally the only word-processing commands used by the typesetter.
  • Distinguish among hyphens (=keyboard hyphen), en dash (=two hyphens), em dash or long dash (=three hyphens) and minus sign (word processor special character). Use en dashes or two hyphens to indicate numerical or page ranges.
  • Numbers never use commas, e.g. 1000, 20 500, 1.340 52.
  • Use small caps in the words 憈able(s), fig(s), and figure(s)?
  • Inquire of the Editor-in-Chief for instructions on how to submit electronic files for half-tone figures if you have digitized figures that require this. See details below for requirements.
  • Copies of DNA sequence alignments must be submitted either as hard copies or on disk for review purposes. Alignments will not be published in Mycologia but must be deposited in TreeBASE or similar public database for final acceptance.
  • Label the disks with first author's name, manuscript reference number, the computer type, the name and version of the program that created the file, and 憃riginal?or 憆evised?as appropriate.
  • Microsoft Word or Word Perfect is preferred.
  • Manuscripts requiring extensive alterations by the editor will be returned to the author for correction of the computer file.

Manuscripts and text.--Authors should follow the suggestions in the latest edition of the CBE Style Manual and are urged to have one or more colleagues read and criticize the manuscript prior to submitting it. When in doubt about style, abbreviations, or punctuation, refer to recent issues of MYCOLOGIA. A demonstration manuscript illustrating the appearance of manuscript copy follows these Instructions.

Articles include the following items, in this order: short title for running head, title, author(s) name(s) and address(es), abstract, key words, text (with desired headings), acknowledgments, literature cited, figure legends, footnotes and tables. Notes or articles of less than four printed pages, including illustrations, ordinarily will be published as brief articles. The manuscript format should be similar to regular articles, except that no primary headings are used other than to designate LITERATURE CITED. Secondary headings may be used and are encouraged for clarity of organization.

DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS

Short title.--Suggest a phrase of up to 5 main words for a running head.

Title.--Make title short but informative. Omit names of authors of taxa. Omit higher taxonomic categories (phylum, order, family); place these in the abstract or key words. Do not abbreviate. Capitalize only the first word and proper nouns; the rest is lower case.

Authors.--Place each author抯 name on a separate line followed by the address on a new line. Addresses are italicized and typed as one paragraph. Authors in sequence with the same address have the address after the last author in the sequence. Provide the email address of the corresponding author, if available, in a footnote following the figure legends.

Abstract.--Include an abstract (before the text) in all articles. Identify by the word Abstract: (note: bold italics) beginning at the left margin with the text immediately following on the same line. The abstract should be written as a single paragraph presenting the salient points of the article. It must stand alone and be informative without the need for reference to the text.

Key Words: Each article must be accompanied by a listing of several key words as an aid to abstracting journals and retrieval. Key words should supplement the title and not duplicate title words. Insert the key words in alphabetical order immediately after the abstract on a separate indented line beginning with the designation Key Words: (note: bold italics).

Headings.--Primary headings should begin at the left margin. Usual primary headings are INTRODUCTION, MATERIALS AND METHODS, RESULTS, DISCUSSION, ACKNOWLEDGMENTS and LITERATURE CITED. Make separate RESULTS and DISCUSSION sections; do not combine into one section. Other headings, such as TAXONOMY and/or taxonomic names, may be used to suit the purposes of the paper. Start second-level headings at left margin--use only as necessary for clarity--italicize (except scientific names) follow by a period and two hyphens (or an en-dash). Third level headings are also italicized, but indented and followed by a period only.

Lists.--Numbered lists in paragraphs should use lower case Roman numerals in parentheses as (i), (ii), (iii) etc. They should be run in a continuous paragraph, not set off as separate paragraphs; see example below.

Abbreviations.--Abbreviations follow the CBE Style Manual. Commonly used abbreviations are as follows: (i) time--yr, mo, wk, d, h, min, s; names of months by first three letters, e.g. Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul (ii) vol--L, mL, 礚; (iii) length--km, m, cm, mm, 祄, nm; (iv) concentration in molarity--M, mM, 礛, nM, pM--differs from molecular amounts--mol, mmol, 祄ol, pmol; (v) distinguish g (grams) from g (force of gravity) by italics for the latter; (vi) temperature--C as 28 C, not 28癈, use ?only for angular measures, latitude, and longitude; (vii) P = probability (uppercase italics). Notice that singular and plural forms are identical and periods are not used for standard abbreviations. Exceptions are Fig., Figs. Do not abbreviate state or province names, e.g. California, not CA; Ontario, not ON.

Footnotes.--Avoid footnotes in the text if at all possible. If used, number them consecutively and place at the end of the article after the figure legends. Do not use your word processor footnote or endnote command. Do not include acknowledgments in footnotes, except required institutional statements. Lengthy descriptions of tabular material should not be in footnotes to tables, but incorporated into the text. Footnotes to the text use superscript numbers. Footnotes to tables use superscript lowercase letters.

Scientific names.--Italicize only generic, infrageneric (subgenus, section), specific, and infraspecific taxa. Citation of nomenclatural authorities for taxa is optional except for taxonomic papers. When cited, authors of all specific and infraspecific taxa except forma specialis should be given, but only when first used in the text or in a table. If authors for taxa are cited in a table, do not repeat in the text. For abbreviation of authors' names, see P. M. Kirk and A. E. Ansell, Authors of Fungal Names, 1992.

New taxa, keys, and formal descriptions.--Place names of new taxa flush with left margin in boldface, not italics, followed by author(s) and status (e.g., sp. nov., stat. nov.) in light roman (neither bold nor italics). Follow with brief but descriptive Latin diagnosis (required for all new taxa except fossil forms and bacteria) in paragraph form. Following the English description, designate the type specimen and place of deposit. Authors are responsible for the accuracy of the Latin diagnosis; consult a Latin scholar; the Editor does not check diagnoses. An English description, in paragraph form, follows the Latin. Record measurements as length by width (or diam); place exceptional dimensions in parentheses: (10--)12--15(--16.5) ?5--6.2 mm. Note spacing and en dashes (two hyphens). Dates preferably should be cited as (example) 10 Aug 1995 or 10-VIII-1995, not 8/10/95. Authors are urged to deposit voucher specimens and to cite those specimens appropriately. Failure to do so may delay the review and publication.

Type titles of keys in all capitals as a primary heading. Keys must be dichotomous, the couplets numbered, and block indented. Leads of first couplet begin at left margin, as do those of third, fifth, etc. Leads of second (fourth, sixth, etc.) are tab indented equal to five spaces. Turnover lines should be justified at left with the preceding line. Normally, keys with four or fewer couplets will be set in one column, while keys of five or more couplets will be set across two columns.

Citing collections.--The following standard format should be used:

Specimens examined. COUNTRY. STATE/PROVINCE: city/town, locality, map coordinates, elevation. Substrate, date (e.g., 10 Aug 1995 or 10-VIII-1995), collector number (italicize or underline collector and collector number) (HOLOTYPE, ISOTYPE etc designations go here when applicable. HERBARIUM). Use the standard recommended abbreviations for herbaria (Holmgren et al 1990. Index herbariorum, 8th ed. Regnum Vegetabile, vol 120). The word HERBARIUM is omitted.

Specimens and molecular sequence data.--Authors are urged to deposit voucher specimens and cultures in public herbaria and culture collections citing these in the paper. Molecular sequence data must be deposited in a molecular sequence repository. MYCOLOGIA will not publish nucleic acid sequences or sequence alignments other than short or very unique sequences. Hard copies or electronic copies on disc should be provided for review. Authors must deposit sequence alignments in TreeBASE at or in a similar public database and cite accession numbers. New sequences must be submitted to GenBank or a similar public database and accession numbers cited.

Illustrations.--Designate all illustrations (photographs, graphs, line drawings) as figures (abbreviate Fig., spell out Figure at beginning of sentence), and number consecutively in Arabic numerals. A plate of drawings or photographs may be treated as one figure with letters for each element or as several figures with each figure numbered consecutively. Do not place numbers on single figures that stand alone. Type figure captions consecutively, in paragraph form following the LITERATURE CITED. See recent issue of MYCOLOGIA for format. Plates and figures should be planned so that the figures are numbered consecutively in the approximate order that they are referenced in the text to allow proper placement of the figures in the printed paper.

Figures must be designed to fit a maximum of 8.2 cm (3.25", one column) or 17.1 cm (6.75", two columns) width by 23.4 cm (9.25") height including space for the legend after reduction. Plan figures to use the full one- or two-column width. Figures should be less than the maximum height to permit insertion of the figure legend beneath. Individual graphs usually will be reduced to one-column width. Maximum size of plate submitted, including margins, may not exceed 30 × 43 cm (12 ´ 17 inches).

Mount photographs on illustration or copy paper, leaving 2.5 cm margins for editorial notations. Trim photographs for composite figures and mount them together without space between. Do not add white rules; the Press will place these. Do not submit loose photographs or line drawings intended for composite figures. Trim carefully to crop and provide straight margins. Do not include photographs and line drawings in the same composite figure. Write author's name and figure number on the front of each figure. A protective cover sheet should be put over the illustrations to minimize damage in transit.

Number or letter figures by using a lettering instrument or printed graphic art aids. Bars affixed to the figures are preferable to indicate magnifications. The bar scale is given in the legend, not on the figure. If magnifications are inserted in the text, any reduction or enlargement to fit the printed page space must be calculated for accurate presentation in the figure legend. Write magnifications as ´ 1200, or ´ 45 100, for example. Graphs or line drawings should be grouped consistent with ease of reading after reduction to the maximum plate size.

Numbers and letters for figures, graphs, and drawings should be approximately the same and style size as those in the printed text of MYCOLOGIA, i.e., 10 point type (about 2.5 mm tall). Times Roman or Helvetica are preferred. Use upper and lower case, not all capitals. Reduction or enlargement of numbers and letters should be taken into account when planning figures, graphs, and drawings if they will not be reproduced at the original size. Preferably, graphs and photographs should be done at actual size for printing.

In addition to the original figures (plates), authors must provide three good photographic copies of each original for review purposes. These should be equal, or nearly equal in quality to the originals. Electrostatic copies of photographs are usually unsatisfactory--except for high-quality color copy-machine copies--and will not be accepted. The reviewers copies are reduced to manuscript page size if the originals are larger. Originals may not exceed 30 ´ 43 cm (12 ´ 17 inches).

Electronic figure submission. Figures scanned or captured electronically must be gray-scale or color image files. Resolution for half-tone plates must be 450—600 dpi. The exact resolution of the files must be provided. Resolution of line art must be 600—1200 dpi. Composite half-tone plates must have the white rules placed between the figures. If figures are submitted electronically, they must be eps or tiff files, sent on CDs or Zip disks.

Tables.--Keep tables to a minimum. Before constructing a table, determine whether the data might be better treated in narrative form in the text. Almost all short tables can be put in such form. Each table begins on a separate page. Tables are numbered in Roman numerals, and the word Table with its number begins at the left margin. The title follows in paragraph form, double-spaced. Titles must be brief. Keep footnotes to an absolute minimum, using superscript lower case letters (not Arabic numerals or other symbols). Omit vertical lines. See MYCOLOGIA for use of horizontal separation lines.

Literature Cited.—Consult The CBE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers" 6th ed. for style. Cite references in the text by author-date (name-year system). All references must be cited in the text and any extras deleted. Journal citations and abbreviations must follow the RULES FOR ABBREVIATING TITLES in "Scientific style and format. The CBE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers" 6th ed., p 743—746. When in doubt, provide the complete (unabbreviated) title. Do not include personal communications, unpublished data, Web page URLs, manuscripts or partial page numbers from books and theses in Literature Cited; place such references in the text. Manuscripts must have been formally accepted for publication before they may be cited as "in press." A copy of the letter of acceptance is required. Cite the journal name and volume number. Type references flush left with no hanging indent. Use three hyphens to replace repeated author(s) name(s). Use two hyphens or an en-dash to indicate page ranges.

Consult a recent issue of MYCOLOGIA for citation style. Examples of the most common forms of citation follow (note spacing and punctuation). See also additional examples in the demonstration manuscript that follows. Note that hanging indents should not be used; the press will set these. To increase readability of the LITERATURE CITED in the manuscript, place an extra line feed (paragraph mark) between references. These are easily removed from the computer file.

Blackwell M, Malloch D. 1989. Pyxidiophora: life histories and arthropod association of two species. Can J Bot 67:2552--2562.

---, ---. 1990. Discovery of a Pyxidiophora with Acariniola-type ascospores. Mycol Res 94:415--417.

Heath IB. 1987. Fluorescent staining of fungal nuclei. In: Fuller MS, Jaworski A. eds. Zoosporic fungi in teaching and research. Athens, Georgia: Southeastern Publishing Corp. p 169--171.

Hetrick BAD, Wilson GWT, Todd TC. 1990. Differential responses of C3 and C4 grasses to mycorrhizal symbiosis, P fertilization, and soil microorganisms. Can J Bot 68: in press.

Lehnen LP Jr. 1988. Development and cytochemistry of kinetosome-associated organelles in Saprolegnia ferax [PhD Dissertation]. Oxford, Ohio: Miami Univ. 171 p.

Ridgway R. 1912. Color standards and color nomenclature. Washington, DC: Publ. by the author. 43 p., 53 pl.

Singer R. 1986. The Agaricales in modern taxonomy. 4th ed. Koenigstein, Germany: Koeltz Scientific Books. 981 p.


Editorial Board

 

EDITORS AND ADVISORY BOARD

J.W. Bennett, Editor-in-Chief
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118-5698
Phone: 504-862-8101 Fx: 504-865-6756 Email: mycology@tulane.edu

John M. Donahue, Assistant Editor
Dept. of Cell and Molecular Biology, 2000 Stern Hall, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118-5698
Phone: 504-862-3154 Fx: 504-865-6756 Email: mycology@tulane.edu

John C. Zak, Book Review Editor
Dept. of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech. University, Lubbock, TX 79409
Phone: 806-742-2718 Email: yzjoz@ttacs.ttu.edu

James Ginns, Managing Editor
1970 Sutherland Rd., Penticton, BC, Canada V2A 8T8
Ph: 250-492-9610 Fx: 250-494-0755 Email: ginnsj@telus.net


ADVISORY BOARD

Joan M. Henson 1998 - 2003, Chair

James B. Anderson 1999 - 2004

Gerald F. Bills 2000 - 2005

David Geiser 2001 - 2006

Mary L. Berbee 2003 - 2008

Thomas D. Bruns (ex officio)


ASSOCIATE EDITORS

Lori M. Carris 2001?003
Dept. of Plant Pathology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-6430

Garry Cole 2003?005
Dept. of Microbiology and Immunology, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, OH 43614-5806

Dennis E. Desjardin 2003?005
Dept. of Biology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA 94132

Larry D. Dunkle 2002?004
Dept. of Botany & Plant Biology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1155

Roy E. Halling 2003?005
Institute of Systematic Botany, The New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, NY 10458-5126

Richard W. Kerrigan 2002?004
Research Dept., Sylvan, Inc., Kittanning, PA 16201

Joyce E. Longcore 2003?005
Dept. of Plant Biology and Pathology, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469-5722

Nicholas P. Money 2001?003
Dept. of Botany, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056

Donald O. Natvig 2003?005
Dept. of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131

Kerry O'Donnell 2001?003
Microbial Properties Research, NRRL, USDA, ARS, Peoria, IL 61604-3999

Stephen W. Peterson 2002?004
Microbial Properties Research, NRRL, USDA, ARS, Peoria, IL 61604

Barbara A. Roy 2003?005
Dept. of Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1210

Gary J. Samuels 2001?004
USDA-ARS, Systematic Botany and Mycology Lab., Beltsville, MD 20705-2350

Karen Snetselaar 2003?005
Dept. of Biology, St. Joseph's University, Philadelphia, PA 19131

Steven L. Stephenson 2003?005
Dept. of Biology, Fairmont State College, Fairmont, WV 26554

Wendy A. Untereiner 2001?003
Dept. of Botany, Brandon Univ., Brandon, MB, CANADA R7I 6A9

Jim White 2002?004
Dept. of Plant Biology and Pathology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901

Charles P. Woloshuk 2003?005
Dept. of Botany and Plant Pathology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1155

If you have questions, please contact:

J.W. Bennett, Editor-in-Chief
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118-5698
Phone: 504-862-8101
Fax: 504-865-6756
Email: mycology@tulane.edu



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