Example of Plant Ecology format
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Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format
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Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format Example of Plant Ecology format
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open access Open Access

Plant Ecology — Template for authors

Publisher: Springer
Categories Rank Trend in last 3 yrs
Plant Science #144 of 445 down down by 46 ranks
Ecology #141 of 400 down down by 37 ranks
journal-quality-icon Journal quality:
Good
calendar-icon Last 4 years overview: 405 Published Papers | 1194 Citations
indexed-in-icon Indexed in: Scopus
last-updated-icon Last updated: 14/07/2020
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Related Journals

open access Open Access

Elsevier

Quality:  
High
CiteRatio: 5.2
SJR: 1.039
SNIP: 1.058
open access Open Access
recommended Recommended

Wiley

Quality:  
High
CiteRatio: 9.7
SJR: 2.452
SNIP: 1.819
open access Open Access

Springer

Quality:  
Good
CiteRatio: 2.1
SJR: 0.419
SNIP: 0.847

NRC Research Press

Quality:  
Good
CiteRatio: 2.4
SJR: 0.458
SNIP: 0.614

Journal Performance & Insights

Impact Factor

CiteRatio

Determines the importance of a journal by taking a measure of frequency with which the average article in a journal has been cited in a particular year.

A measure of average citations received per peer-reviewed paper published in the journal.

1.509

16% from 2018

Impact factor for Plant Ecology from 2016 - 2019
Year Value
2019 1.509
2018 1.789
2017 1.759
2016 1.615
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

2.9

12% from 2019

CiteRatio for Plant Ecology from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 2.9
2019 3.3
2018 3.3
2017 3.3
2016 3.0
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • Impact factor of this journal has decreased by 16% in last year.
  • This journal’s impact factor is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • CiteRatio of this journal has decreased by 12% in last years.
  • This journal’s CiteRatio is in the top 10 percentile category.

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)

Measures weighted citations received by the journal. Citation weighting depends on the categories and prestige of the citing journal.

Measures actual citations received relative to citations expected for the journal's category.

0.642

11% from 2019

SJR for Plant Ecology from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 0.642
2019 0.723
2018 0.864
2017 0.914
2016 0.824
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

0.763

2% from 2019

SNIP for Plant Ecology from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 0.763
2019 0.782
2018 0.872
2017 1.046
2016 0.773
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • SJR of this journal has decreased by 11% in last years.
  • This journal’s SJR is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SNIP of this journal has decreased by 2% in last years.
  • This journal’s SNIP is in the top 10 percentile category.

Plant Ecology

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Springer

Plant Ecology

Plant Ecology publishes original scientific papers that report and interpret the findings of pure and applied research into the ecology of vascular plants in terrestrial and wetland ecosystems. Empirical, experimental, theoretical and review papers reporting on ecophysiology, ...... Read More

Plant Science

Ecology

Agricultural and Biological Sciences

i
Last updated on
14 Jul 2020
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ISSN
1385-0237
i
Impact Factor
Medium - 0.926
i
Open Access
Yes
i
Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy
Green faq
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Plagiarism Check
Available via Turnitin
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Endnote Style
Download Available
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Bibliography Name
SPBASIC
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Citation Type
Author Year
(Blonder et al, 1982)
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Bibliography Example
Beenakker CWJ (2006) Specular andreev reflection in graphene. Phys Rev Lett 97(6):067,007, URL 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.067007

Top papers written in this journal

Book Chapter DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-9197-2_7
Detrended correspondence analysis: an improved ordination technique
M. O. Hill1, Hugh G. Gauch1
01 Jan 1980 - Plant Ecology

Abstract:

Studies by ourselves and others (Swan 1970, Austin & Noy-Meir 1972, Beals 1973, Hill 1973, 1974, Austin 1976a, b, Fasham 1977, Gauch Whittaker & Wentwarth 1977, Noy-Meir & Whittaker 1977, Orloci 1978, Gauch, Whittaker & Singer 1979) have found faults with all ordination techniques currently in use, at least when applied to ec... Studies by ourselves and others (Swan 1970, Austin & Noy-Meir 1972, Beals 1973, Hill 1973, 1974, Austin 1976a, b, Fasham 1977, Gauch Whittaker & Wentwarth 1977, Noy-Meir & Whittaker 1977, Orloci 1978, Gauch, Whittaker & Singer 1979) have found faults with all ordination techniques currently in use, at least when applied to ecological data specifying the occurrences of species in community samples. These faults certainly do not make existing techniques useless; but they mean that results must be interpreted with caution. Even with the best techniques, the underlying structure of the data is often poorly expressed. read more read less

Topics:

Ordination (61%)61% related to the paper, Detrended correspondence analysis (59%)59% related to the paper, Correspondence analysis (54%)54% related to the paper, Ecology (disciplines) (53%)53% related to the paper, Applied ecology (51%)51% related to the paper
3,628 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1007/BF00048036
Spatial pattern and ecological analysis
Pierre Legendre1, Marie-Josée Fortin2
03 May 1989 - Plant Ecology

Abstract:

The spatial heterogeneity of populations and communities plays a central role in many ecological theories, for instance the theories of succession, adaptation, maintenance of species diversity, community stability, competition, predator-prey interactions, parasitism, epidemics and other natural catastrophes, ergoclines, and s... The spatial heterogeneity of populations and communities plays a central role in many ecological theories, for instance the theories of succession, adaptation, maintenance of species diversity, community stability, competition, predator-prey interactions, parasitism, epidemics and other natural catastrophes, ergoclines, and so on. This paper will review how the spatial structure of biological populations and communities can be studied. We first demonstrate that many of the basic statistical methods used in ecological studies are impaired by autocorrelated data. Most if not all environmental data fall in this category. We will look briefly at ways of performing valid statistical tests in the presence of spatial autocorrelation. Methods now available for analysing the spatial structure of biological populations are described, and illustrated by vegetation data. These include various methods to test for the presence of spatial autocorrelation in the data: univariate methods (all-directional and two-dimensional spatial correlograms, and two-dimensional spectral analysis), and the multivariate Mantel test and Mantel correlogram; other descriptive methods of spatial structure: the univariate variogram, and the multivariate methods of clustering with spatial contiguity constraint; the partial Mantel test, presented here as a way of studying causal models that include space as an explanatory variable; and finally, various methods for mapping ecological variables and producing either univariate maps (interpolation, trend surface analysis, kriging) or maps of truly multivariate data (produced by constrained clustering). A table shows the methods classified in terms of the ecological questions they allow to resolve. Reference is made to available computer programs. read more read less

Topics:

Spatial analysis (60%)60% related to the paper, Spatial ecology (60%)60% related to the paper, Univariate (57%)57% related to the paper, Variogram (55%)55% related to the paper, Mantel test (53%)53% related to the paper
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2,166 Citations
Book Chapter DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-4061-1_6
Compositional dissimilarity as a robust measure of ecological distance
Daniel P. Faith1, Peter R. Minchin1, Lee Belbin1
01 Apr 1987 - Plant Ecology

Abstract:

The robustness of quantitative measures of compositional dissimilarity between sites was evaluated using extensive computer simulations of species’ abundance patterns over one and two dimensional configurations of sample sites in ecological space. Robustness was equated with the strength, over a range of models, of the linear... The robustness of quantitative measures of compositional dissimilarity between sites was evaluated using extensive computer simulations of species’ abundance patterns over one and two dimensional configurations of sample sites in ecological space. Robustness was equated with the strength, over a range of models, of the linear and monotonic (rank-order) relationship between the compositional dissimilarities and the corresponding Euclidean distances between sites measured in the ecological space. The range of models reflected different assumptions about species’ response curve shape, sampling pattern of sites, noise level of the data, species’ interactions, trends in total site abundance, and beta diversity of gradients. read more read less

Topics:

Abundance (ecology) (53%)53% related to the paper
View PDF
1,530 Citations
Book Chapter DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-4061-1_9
An evaluation of the relative robustness of techniques for ecological ordination
Peter R. Minchin1
01 Apr 1987 - Plant Ecology

Abstract:

Simulated vegetation data were used to assess the relative robustness of ordination techniques to variations in the model of community variation in relation to environment. The methods compared were local non-metric multidimensional scaling (LNMDS), detrended correspondence analysis (DCA), Gaussian ordination (GO), principal ... Simulated vegetation data were used to assess the relative robustness of ordination techniques to variations in the model of community variation in relation to environment. The methods compared were local non-metric multidimensional scaling (LNMDS), detrended correspondence analysis (DCA), Gaussian ordination (GO), principal components analysis (PCA) and principal co-ordinates analysis (PCoA). Both LNMDS and PCoA were applied to a matrix of Bray-Curtis coefficients. The results clearly demonstrated the ineffectiveness of the linear techniques (PCA, PCoA), due to curvilinear distortion. Gaussian ordination proved very sensitive to noise and was not robust to marked departures from a symmetric, unimodal response model. The currently popular method of DCA displayed a lack of robustness to variations in the response model and the sampling pattern. Furthermore, DCA ordinations of two-dimensional models often exhibited marked distortions, even when response surfaces were unimodal and symmetric. LNMDS is recommended as a robust technique for indirect gradient analysis, which deserves more widespread use by community ecologists. read more read less

Topics:

Ordination (57%)57% related to the paper, Gradient analysis (54%)54% related to the paper, Principal component analysis (52%)52% related to the paper
1,501 Citations
Book Chapter DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-9194-1_17
Transformation of Cover-Abundance Values in Phytosociology and its Effects on Community Similarity
01 May 1979 - Plant Ecology

Abstract:

The numerical treatment of phytosociological data is often based on estimates of cover and/or abundance according to the Braun-Blanquet and Domin scales. Since Schwickerath (1931, 1938, 1940) and Tuxen & Ellenberg (1937) published their transformations there has been discussion on the way the scale values should be used in ca... The numerical treatment of phytosociological data is often based on estimates of cover and/or abundance according to the Braun-Blanquet and Domin scales. Since Schwickerath (1931, 1938, 1940) and Tuxen & Ellenberg (1937) published their transformations there has been discussion on the way the scale values should be used in calculations Qualitative approaches, i.e. based on presence and absence have also been favoured (e.g. Williams & Lambert 1959, van der Maarel 1966) Dagnelie (I960) proposed a pseudoqualitative basis for various calculations by means of a ‘coupure’. A coupure includes the deletion of lower values, usually according to a fixed criterion, e.g. the number of occurrences in a phytosociological table to be remained should be as close as possible to 50%. Dagnelie’s approach remained largely unknown and apparently it has never been tested. read more read less

Topics:

Cover-abundance (58%)58% related to the paper
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1,255 Citations
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Plant Ecology format uses SPBASIC citation style.

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Frequently asked questions

1. Can I write Plant Ecology in LaTeX?

Absolutely not! Our tool has been designed to help you focus on writing. You can write your entire paper as per the Plant Ecology guidelines and auto format it.

2. Do you follow the Plant Ecology guidelines?

Yes, the template is compliant with the Plant Ecology guidelines. Our experts at SciSpace ensure that. If there are any changes to the journal's guidelines, we'll change our algorithm accordingly.

3. Can I cite my article in multiple styles in Plant Ecology?

Of course! We support all the top citation styles, such as APA style, MLA style, Vancouver style, Harvard style, and Chicago style. For example, when you write your paper and hit autoformat, our system will automatically update your article as per the Plant Ecology citation style.

4. Can I use the Plant Ecology templates for free?

Sign up for our free trial, and you'll be able to use all our features for seven days. You'll see how helpful they are and how inexpensive they are compared to other options, Especially for Plant Ecology.

5. Can I use a manuscript in Plant Ecology that I have written in MS Word?

Yes. You can choose the right template, copy-paste the contents from the word document, and click on auto-format. Once you're done, you'll have a publish-ready paper Plant Ecology that you can download at the end.

6. How long does it usually take you to format my papers in Plant Ecology?

It only takes a matter of seconds to edit your manuscript. Besides that, our intuitive editor saves you from writing and formatting it in Plant Ecology.

7. Where can I find the template for the Plant Ecology?

It is possible to find the Word template for any journal on Google. However, why use a template when you can write your entire manuscript on SciSpace , auto format it as per Plant Ecology's guidelines and download the same in Word, PDF and LaTeX formats? Give us a try!.

8. Can I reformat my paper to fit the Plant Ecology's guidelines?

Of course! You can do this using our intuitive editor. It's very easy. If you need help, our support team is always ready to assist you.

9. Plant Ecology an online tool or is there a desktop version?

SciSpace's Plant Ecology is currently available as an online tool. We're developing a desktop version, too. You can request (or upvote) any features that you think would be helpful for you and other researchers in the "feature request" section of your account once you've signed up with us.

10. I cannot find my template in your gallery. Can you create it for me like Plant Ecology?

Sure. You can request any template and we'll have it setup within a few days. You can find the request box in Journal Gallery on the right side bar under the heading, "Couldn't find the format you were looking for like Plant Ecology?”

11. What is the output that I would get after using Plant Ecology?

After writing your paper autoformatting in Plant Ecology, you can download it in multiple formats, viz., PDF, Docx, and LaTeX.

12. Is Plant Ecology's impact factor high enough that I should try publishing my article there?

To be honest, the answer is no. The impact factor is one of the many elements that determine the quality of a journal. Few of these factors include review board, rejection rates, frequency of inclusion in indexes, and Eigenfactor. You need to assess all these factors before you make your final call.

13. What is Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy for Plant Ecology?

SHERPA/RoMEO Database

We extracted this data from Sherpa Romeo to help researchers understand the access level of this journal in accordance with the Sherpa Romeo Archiving Policy for Plant Ecology. The table below indicates the level of access a journal has as per Sherpa Romeo's archiving policy.

RoMEO Colour Archiving policy
Green Can archive pre-print and post-print or publisher's version/PDF
Blue Can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF
Yellow Can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing)
White Archiving not formally supported
FYI:
  1. Pre-prints as being the version of the paper before peer review and
  2. Post-prints as being the version of the paper after peer-review, with revisions having been made.

14. What are the most common citation types In Plant Ecology?

The 5 most common citation types in order of usage for Plant Ecology are:.

S. No. Citation Style Type
1. Author Year
2. Numbered
3. Numbered (Superscripted)
4. Author Year (Cited Pages)
5. Footnote

15. How do I submit my article to the Plant Ecology?

It is possible to find the Word template for any journal on Google. However, why use a template when you can write your entire manuscript on SciSpace , auto format it as per Plant Ecology's guidelines and download the same in Word, PDF and LaTeX formats? Give us a try!.

16. Can I download Plant Ecology in Endnote format?

Yes, SciSpace provides this functionality. After signing up, you would need to import your existing references from Word or Bib file to SciSpace. Then SciSpace would allow you to download your references in Plant Ecology Endnote style according to Elsevier guidelines.

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