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Normas de estilo de publicación en Scientia Marina

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Normas de Estilo de la Publicación

Author Guidelines
Scope
Scientia Marina welcomes original manuscripts that have not been considered for publication elsewhere on marine research in the following fields: Marine Biology and Ecology, Fisheries and Fisheries Ecology, Systematics, Faunistics and Marine Biogeography, and Physical Oceanography, Chemical Oceanography, and Marine Geology. Preference will be given to manuscripts of a multi-disciplinary nature and to those of general interest to marine scientists throughout the world. Studies of local interest and/or of descriptive nature may also be acceptable if significant general implications are included. The preferential geographic study areas are the Mediterranean Sea and adjacent Atlantic Ocean. The following types of contribution can be published in Scientia Marina: Articles, Reviews, News and Comments and Book Reviews.
Editorial Policy
Manuscripts that do not fall within the scope of Scientia Marina and those which do not follow the Instructions to Authors will be returned to the authors. Manuscripts will be assigned to one of the Scientific Editors, who will critically evaluate their scientific merits, choose appropriate referees and evaluate the reviewer¿s comments. The Editor-in-Chief decides to accept or reject them based on the reports and recommendations of the Scientific Editor. Submission of a manuscript implies the transfer of the copyright for the accepted article to the journal and to all those media that the journal considers suitable for the dissemination of the work. However, the author retains the right to disseminate his/her own work.
Online publication
Accepted articles appear online as "Forthcoming articles" as soon as the galley proofs have been approved by the authors and the Editor-in-Chief. No changes can be made after online publication. The dates of submission, acceptance and online publication will appear at the end of each article. The corresponding author will receive galley proofs and will be responsible for the final version of the published articles. Twenty-five reprints will be sent to the corresponding author free of charge.
Submission of Manuscripts
* Submission of a manuscript implies that all authors have approved and agree on the contents of the submitted text. It is the responsibility of the corresponding author that all co-authors have the correct information on the submitted manuscript.
* A single file including text, tables and figures (preferably in pdf format) must be sent electronically to scimar@icm.csic.es.
* Language: Contributions must be in English.
First page
* Please include the title, the complete name ( first name and family name) and postal address of the author(s), and the fax number and e-mail address of the corresponding author
* Title: Titles which include species names must also specify the necessary taxa and subtaxa, so that readers not acquainted with the species may at least know the zoological/botanical group the species belongs to.
* Summary: No longer than 200 words, in a single paragraph, followed by a maximum of 8 keywords (in agreement with ASFA recommendations).
* Resumen: A Spanish translation of the title, summary, and keywords must be provided, whenever possible.
* Running title: A short title not exceeding 50 characters must be included.
* Keywords: Please provide 6 to 8 keywords. In agreement with the recommendations of the IOC-UNESCO, we recommend that the authors use the ASFA Thesaurus to identify the right keywords for their articles.
Text of the article
* Length: The total number of typed pages should not exceed 30 and will usually be lower (fewer than 7000 words, including references and figure legends). Font size 12 is recommended. Leave 25 mm margins on all sides. Manuscripts must be printed double-spaced throughout. Pages and lines must be numbered.
* Sections: Try to follow the usual sections (INTRODUCTION, MATERIAL AND METHODS, RESULTS, DISCUSSION) whenever possible. Avoid a single section on Results and Discussion. Avoid numbering sections. Main headings should be in bold type capital letters, subheadings in bold type sentence case.
* Do not use ampersands (&); instead use the word "and"
* Some Latin abbreviations are set in roman type because they have been thoroughly incorporated into English (note that no comma follows the abbreviations). These include: e.g./ i.e./ ca./ in situ/ vs/ per se/.
* Figures and tables should be numbered sequentially in the order that they appear in the text.
* Note the style of citing figures in the following examples: "The Balearic Islands (Fig. 1) are separated from the Iberian Peninsula by¿"; "The bathymetric distribution of the species is shown in Figure 3."
Units and numeric values
* Use International System units (km, m, kg, g, etc.).
* Use the symbol "t" for metric tons.
* The symbols h, min and s must be used for hours, minutes and seconds.
* Use spaces between the quantity and the units (e.g. 2 m, 3 kg, 7 g). Exceptions: degree Celsius °C, latitude or longitude units and % (e.g. 37°C; 41°N, 1°17¿E and 10%).
* Do not include spaces between the following symbols and numeric values: >, < (e.g. >7, <7).
* Use a dot "." as a decimal marker: Do not use any symbol to separate thousands (e.g. 5200 or 10300).
* Salinity is a dimensionless unit, and should not have units such as ¿. It is valid to state once in the paper that salinity was measured in practical salinity units (psu), but thereafter no units should be used. This applies to both text and figure legends and axes.
References in the text
* When several references are cited between brackets they must follow a chronological order. Note the style of punctuation in the following examples:
... poses systematic problems (Hulley, 1981).
... in coastal upwelled waters (Olivieri, 1983a,b; Salat, 2000, 2002; Horstman, SFRI unpublished data).
... following the opinions expressed by Margalef (1978).
Roel et al. (1985) reported that
# The expression et al. should always be in italics.
# Ensure that there is a perfect match between references in the text and in the reference list. All references cited in the text, both published and in press (including tables and figures), must be included in the reference list. It is not necessary to include the reference when the scientific name of a species is cited in full (e.g. Liocarcinus depurator (Linnaeus, 1758)).
Reference List
* References must be ordered alphabetically.
* Papers "in preparation" or "submitted" are not acceptable as references. Once accepted, they may be quoted as "in press", but not before.
* The format of the references must be strictly followed.
* The list of references should include the complete list of authors, year of publication, title (in the original language), journal, volume and page numbers. Journal abbreviations should be in accordance with the WORLD LIST OF SCIENTIFIC PERIODICALS.
* Follow the punctuation and style shown in the examples below:
Gili, J.M., J. Murillo and J.D. Ros. ¿ 1989. The distribution pattern of benthic Cnidarians in the western Mediterranean. Sci. Mar., 53(1): 19-35.
Delgado, M. and J.M. Fortuño. ¿ 1991. Atlas de Fitoplancton del Mar Mediterráneo. Sci. Mar., 55(Suppl. 1): 1-133.
Pomeroy, L.R. ¿ 2004. Building bridges across subdisciplines in marine ecology. Sci. Mar., 68(Suppl. 1): 5-12.
Margalef, R. ¿ 1986. Ecología. Ediciones Omega, Barcelona.
Saiz, E. ¿ 1991. Importància de l¿energia auxiliar en la dinàmica dels sistemes pelàgics: turbulència i zooplàncton. Ph.D. thesis, Univ. Barcelona.
* Please pay especial attention to the citation of articles within books according to the following examples. Do not forget to give the publisher and place of publication and to check the punctuation:
Margalef, R. ¿ 1975. Diversity, stability and maturity in natural ecosystems. In: W.H. van Dobben and R.H. Lowe-McConnell (eds.), Unifying concepts in ecology, pp. 139-150. Junk, The Hague.
Boyd, A.J, J. Salat and M. Masó. ¿ 1987. The seasonal intrusion of relative saline water on the shelf off northern and central Namibia. In: A.I.L. Payne, J.A.
Gulland and K.H. Brink (eds.), The Benguela and Comparable Ecosystems. S. Afr. J. mar. Sci., 5: 107-120.
Tables
* Tables should be consecutively numbered with Arabic numerals and typed on separate pages.
* Table headings should be given above each table.
* Tables should be designed to fit in the format of the printed page.
* Vertical lines should not be used.
Figures
* Figure legends should be typed consecutively on a separate page.
* Drawings, graphs and photographs should be carefully presented on separate sheets. Figures must be prepared so that, after reduction to fit the size of the journal page (print area is 16.9 mm or 8.1 mm width), characters and symbols will still be readable.
* All figures included in a manuscript should use the same font type.
* Avoid very thin or very thick lines.
* Do not use colour if an illustration is to be reproduced in black and white.
* Please do not draw with hairlines. The minimum line width is 0.2 mm (0.5 pt) measured at the final scale.
* Map figures must indicate N, S, E or W.
* Colour photographs can be published at moderate fees.
Electronic Submission of Illustrations
Once the manuscript has been accepted for publication, authors will be asked to send the final version either online or on a physical data medium. It may be sent by e-mail (only for files of less than 2 MB), or on CD-ROM or DVD.
Text must be sent in "Word" format. The illustrations must be sent separately from the text. Image files should not be embedded in a word-processor file.
Vector graphics exported from a drawing program should be stored in EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) format. Fonts used in the graphics (use preferably Times) must be included. Suitable programs include Freehand, Illustrator and Corel Draw.
Most presentation programs, such as Excel and Power Point, produce data that cannot be processed since they do not support the export of EPS data.
Halftone images Store colour illustrations as CMYK and monotone as greyscale in TIFF or JPEG format. Whenever you use JPEG format, choose maximum quality instead of high compression in the options window. Suitable programs include Photoshop, Picture Publisher and Photo Paint.

Table of resolutions for images and scans
Original Mode Final resolution Format
Colour CMYK 300 dpi TIFF or JPEG
Monotone Greyscale 300 dpi TIFF or JPEG
B/W line drawing Line 900-1200 dpi TIFF or EPS


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