Journal of Cetacean Research and Management
International Whaling Commission · United Kingdom · Est. 1999
Aims & Scope
JCRM publishes scientific papers on matters of importance to the conservation and management of whales, dolphins and porpoises, with a particular focus on papers relevant to the IWC Scientific Committee. Scope of JCRM JCRM welcomes submissions across the following themes and topics: Population assessment and trends Population dynamics and biology Taxonomy Management strategies Direct and indirect exploitation Environmental changes and threats to cetaceans Whale watching and sanctuaries If you are not sure whether your paper fits within the scope of JCRM, please contact [email protected] Short communications JCRM welcomes full papers and short communications. Short communications present original and significant material, usually limited to a single finding, interesting observation or an important technical or methodological advance. Short communications are limited in length to ~2500 words and normally include up to one (multi-panel) figure and one table. The manuscript should follow the normal structure (Title, Authors, Affiliations, Abstract, Key Words, Main Text, Acknowledgements, References). The Main Text should not include subheadings, and the Abstract should not exceed 100 words. Cetacean names Please use the IWC's approved common names in the Main Text. Only use Latin names for the first mention and in brackets after the common name. Keywords Please choose from the list of JCRM's keywords . Spellings British English should be used unless the author is from the United States, in which case American spellings may be used. The published version will use British spellings. Hyphens (a) These are used in compound adjectives, preceding a noun: e.g., age-length key, length-specific method; but not where part of the compound adjective consists of a number: e.g., 3cm long earplug, a 500kW lamp. (b) Hyphens are omitted where a compound noun is sufficiently familiar to be printed as one word: e.g., ultrasonic, daytime, interspecific, overexploitation, northeastern, whalewatching; except where this would result in an awkward spelling: e.g., infra-red, night-time, photo-identification. Capitals (a) Common examples are given below: Area (when referring to Area I, etc.), Sector, Division, Initial Management Stock, Antarctic, South Atlantic Ocean, Northern Hemisphere, Scientific Committee, Table 1, Fig. 1, Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Bryde's whale and Hector's dolphin (i.e., where named after a person); but please note: central North Pacific, sub-committee, sub-Arctic, sei whale, common dolphin, etc. Numbers, dates, map references (a) Numbers under 10 should be spelt out. Figures should be used for percentages (where % rather than percent is used): six sperm whales but 6% of sperm whales. (b) Commas should be inserted into numbers with four or more digits: e.g., 6,789; 2,060,313. (c) Decimal points should be indicated by full stops, not commas. Zeros should be included: e.g., 0.12. (d) There should be no space between numbers and abbreviated units: e.g., 6m, 25kg. (e) Dates should be in the form day/month/year: e.g., 17 March 1983. (f) Map references should be in the form: 42º6'S, 23º42'W. Abbreviations (a) Where the last letter of an abbreviation is the same as the last letter of the full word then no full stop is necessary: e.g., Fig. 1 but Figs 1-7. (b) Capital abbreviations do not require full stops: e.g., WC, USA, MSYR, 60°N, CV, SD, SE, etc. (c) Commonly used abbreviations for quantities have no full stop: e.g., 6cm, 22m, 14ft, 456kg. (d) If a personal communication is used, abbreviate as `pers. comm.'. Italics Italics should be used for: Book titles and journals (e.g., Moby Dick ) Vessel names (e.g., Shonan Maru No. 2, Moonlight Tango ) Latin names of plants and animals (e.g., Eubalaena glacialis ) Foreign words not part of everyday English (e.g., et al .) Quotations Use single quotation marks. Use double quotation marks for a quote within a quote. Within a quotation, follow the style and punctuation of the original. If omitting a section, please indicate by three full stops in square brackets [...]. If adding a word(s) or phrase, please use square brackets [my italics]. Equations, mathematical references (a) Ensure superscripts and subscripts are easily discernible. (b) Show all symbols and please spell out Greek letters the first time they occur in the margin. Clearly distinguish between: the letter l, the number 1, the letter O, the number 0 (e.g., by underlining the letters). Use italics for letters indicating parameters: e.g., y = m x + 66 c + v z References Please format references in the APA style. There is extensive guidance here . In the text: Where more than two co-authors are involved, please use: O'Flaherty et al . (1983); If more than one reference is made, then a semi-colon should be used: e.g., Irving, 1982; James, 1881; Watterson, 1987; In references to the Scientific Committee or other International Whaling Commission reports, IWC is used: e.g., 'It was agreed last year (IWC, 1983) that [...]'; Where referencing more than one paper by the same author in the same year, please use 2020a, 2020b, etc. (b) In the reference list: All authors' names should be included Surnames always precede initials: e.g., Bannister, J.L., Best, P.B., & Cawthorn, M.W., except for editors of books in example (v) below; References to journal articles should include: the title of the paper (sentence case), the journal title (italics and abbreviated), the volume, issue and page numbers; References to books should include: the book title (italics with initial capitals for major words) and the publisher; References to a chapter within a book should include: the title and page numbers of the article, the editor's name, the title of the book and the publisher; The reference list should be arranged in alphabetical order by author and, within this, by date of publication. Please provide DOI numbers where possible. Copyright Authors retain the copyright in their published papers. Papers are published under a Creative Commons BY-NC 4.0 License . Privacy statement The names and email addresses entered in this Journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this Journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party. Publicity When submitting a paper to JCRM, authors agree that, upon publication, the paper may be promoted by the IWC. This may be via a range of means, including the IWC website and social media channels.
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Frequently asked questions about Journal of Cetacean Research and Management
Is Journal of Cetacean Research and Management a predatory journal?
No major predatory indicators were found for Journal of Cetacean Research and Management. It is indexed in Scopus, DOAJ and has a PubScope Trust Score of 27/100. Always confirm fit and policies before submitting.
What is the impact factor of Journal of Cetacean Research and Management?
Journal of Cetacean Research and Management is not in the Web of Science Core Collection, so it has no official Clarivate Journal Impact Factor. Its SCImago SJR score is 0.323.
Is Journal of Cetacean Research and Management indexed in Scopus and Web of Science?
Journal of Cetacean Research and Management is indexed in Scopus, DOAJ.
What is the aims and scope of Journal of Cetacean Research and Management?
JCRM publishes scientific papers on matters of importance to the conservation and management of whales, dolphins and porpoises, with a particular focus on papers relevant to the IWC Scientific Committee. Scope of JCRM JCRM welcomes submissions across the following themes and topics: Population assessment and trends Population dynamics and biology Taxonomy Management strategies Direct and indirect exploitation Environmental changes and threats to cetaceans Whale watching and sanctuaries If you are not sure whether your paper fits within the scope of JCRM, please contact [email protected] Sho
How much does it cost to publish in Journal of Cetacean Research and Management?
Journal of Cetacean Research and Management is a Diamond open-access journal — there is no article processing charge (APC) to publish.
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