OIKOS

FOR AUTHORS

This page is for authors interested in publishing in Oikos. Make sure your manuscript fits within our Aims and Scope!

Please also read the Nordic Society Oikos Publishing Policies and NSO Journals Author Guidelines.

Overview:

Aims and Scope

Oikos publishes original research and perspectives that have the potential to change or substantially improve our understanding of ecological mechanisms, processes, or patterns in nature. These original perspectives can be generated from new theory, new concepts, well-designed experiments that test theory or uncover processes, and/or from resounding analyses of ecological patterns. Oikos considers publishing interdisciplinary studies that integrate across ecology and other relevant domains to tackle ecological, environmental, or societal challenges. Oikos gives low priority to studies that confirm or extend current knowledge by extending well-established results to unstudied taxa or regions. Oikos does not publish book reviews.

Types of Articles

Alongside standard Research papers and Meta-analyses, Oikos publishes three categories of concise papers with expedited peer review: Forum papers, Ignite papers, and Dialogue papers. Read about each of them below.

  • Research papers report original research in all fields of ecology and should aim at a readership from a wide range of ecological disciplines.

  • Synthesis is a critical component of modern ecology and involves big data in many forms. We welcome meta-analyses and systematic reviews provided quantitative analyses are included either of the literature or of the evidence reported within studies. Novelty, future research, and analysis of gaps are strongly encouraged versus summary. Transparent reporting of the synthesis process is required.

  • Oikos Forum papers provide a home for novel ideas and synthesis. The format can be short notes or more substantial reviews to bring fields together, to transgress existing boundaries by synthesizing larger fields or seemingly disparate areas, and to offer new ways of interpreting existing data.

    Forum articles must strive for conceptual unification and serve as a point of departure for future work rather than just summarizing existing bodies of theory and data. It is an arena for challenging current thinking on ecological issues by revising established concepts and insights from critical experiments or for developing new theory to promote novel research. Purely speculative pieces are discouraged.

    Where uncertainties, problems, or debates in current theory are identified, authors are strongly encouraged to, wherever possible, highlight productive and positive lines of research that may resolve the issue. In particular, we encourage collaboration in debates to promote more effective synthesis and balance. A successful Forum paper includes novelty, an appeal to our general readership and is a topic that stands to generate synthesis in the field.

    Prospective authors are strongly encouraged to read the editorial on why many Forum manuscripts are unsuccessful.

  • Oikos Ignite papers are short contributions involving very specific and clear results from empirical (observational or experimental) or theoretical research. These results should be considered as timely to address critical ecological research topics and ignite further and critical research to address them.

    Results that focus on novel patterns and processes in nature at intermediate and large scales without having a strong explanatory basis for its origin are also of interest. In these cases, authors need to provide a strong justification for why they believe the pattern or process needs to be further investigated and which lines of research are necessary to uncover their causes.

    Ignite papers should have a maximum of 2000 words (not including abstract, reference list and figure/table legends) and 3 elements to summarize results in the form of figures or tables. As much as possible, Ignite papers will be reviewed by members of the editorial board to reduce review time.

    If you have questions about whether your contribution is suitable for this section, please contact the Ignite Editor, Pedro Peres-Neto.

  • Oikos Dialogues promote ecological synthesis via critical thinking and the expression of contrasting viewpoints on historical or current critically important ecological topics. They have a concise format.

    Topics are chosen to foster the articulation of constructive debate in the form of, alternative, conflicting or opposed viewpoints among contributors. Dialogues may act as a source for synthesis and insights for future research on the topic.

    Dialogues are comprised of three sections:

    1. overture where each contributor explores stimulating views on the topic, including points of tension, disparity in viewpoints and insights that can either promote coherence or insights on why discord is likely to remain (max. 300 words per contributor). In the overture, contributions are made without knowledge of the other contributors and what their views are. In most cases, each text appears separately in alphabetical order based on the first name of the author, promoting a convivial context for debate; this will also be the final authorship order;

    2. in the dialogue section, all contributors receive the contributions of the other reviewers and anonymity is lifted. Contributors then have the opportunity to elaborate further on their views or the views of the other contributors.  Each text appears in the same order as the overture;

    3. the epilogue section is meant to emerge as one voice where all contributors participate to promote a synthesis and insights for future research on the topic (max 1000 words).

    Figures and boxes can be considered in any section. Dialogues can be suggested by the readership at large but they are entirely commissioned by the editor of the section. It should usually include between 4 and 6 contributors. Space is limited for this section as we plan to publish about 4 Dialogues per year. Dialogues will be reviewed by members of the editorial board to expedite review time.

    Contact the Dialogues Editor, Pedro Peres-Neto, for more details.

Special Sections

While speculation can lead to new hypotheses and interesting debate, it’s frequently discouraged in scientific articles, and co-authors too often seek consensus regarding interpretation and conclusions of their collaborative papers. We at Oikos believe that by minimizing areas of conflict and uncertainty, the scientific publication process may actually inhibit the development of novel ideas and encourage conformity. So we take a different approach: Oikos articles have optional sections for Speculations and Alternative Viewpoints.

Speculations

The goal of this section is to elicit a lively discussion. It can include any types of opinion about results and conclusions without strong evidence or consider views about how the work may be perceived by others in the field. Oikos wants to give authors the opportunity to share their “outside the box” thoughts and potentially novel ideas to be explored as a result of their paper.

  • A great example of “alternative viewpoints” comes from Abrams and Ginzburg (2000):

    “If we both agree that functional responses in nature are unlikely to be either purely prey or purely ratio dependent, why is there a controversy? There are two topics about which we disagree. The first is the appropriate mathematical representation when reproduction is not continuous and when significant prey depletion can occur between reproductive events. Abrams feels that this calls for the use of methods that represent the functional response on a continuous basis and reproduction on a discrete basis; for example, as is done in the Nicholson–Bailey host–parasitoid model. Ginzburg thinks that the predator reproductive period is the minimal indivisible unit of time over which both functional and numerical responses should be measured, because capturing interaction is the goal of the model.”

    Abrams, P.A and Ginzburg, L.R. 2000. The nature of predation: prey dependent, ratio dependent or neither? – TREE 15: 337–341.

Alternative Viewpoints

This section serves as a forum to describe potential differences of opinion among authors in respect to particular interpretations, conclusions and/or implications of the work. The Alternative Viewpoints section is not meant to generate conflict among authors, but rather to provide a forum in which authors expose their differences in points of view in judicious but provocative and productive ways.

We encourage authors of all our articles except Dialogue papers to contribute one or both of these brief (maximum of 200 words each) additional sections, which will appear after the Discussion. These two sections can be included after the manuscript undergoes peer review and associate editors may comment on the format of the text in the final version before final acceptance for publication. Both sections are flexible in style and authors are encouraged to be imaginative about what they want to convey to the readership, and how.

Prepare your submission

See the NSO Author Guidelines for detailed instructions on preparing and formatting all of your materials.

You will submit your title file, main text file, data and code files or links, and any supplementary files through ScholarOne, along with statements on significance, data availability, conflict of interest, ethics, funding, and acknowledgments.

Before submitting, check the PDF generated by the ScholarOne system to make sure that equations, text, and all files are complete and displayed correctly. If you are not proficient in English, you might consider having your manuscript checked by a proficient writer in English before you submit it. (Wiley also offers a wide range of professional pre-submission services. Have a look here.)

Thank you, and congratulations on submitting your paper to Oikos! You will receive a confirmation email with a manuscript ID. Please refer to this ID in all correspondence with the Editorial Office.

Licensing & Open Access

All authors are required to grant the NSO a license to publish. Please read the NSO Publishing Policies before submission. Authors may choose to publish under the terms of the journal’s standard copyright agreement, or Open Access under the terms of a Creative Commons License. Note that certain funders may mandate that an article is published as an Open Access article under a CC BY license. The Wiley Author Compliance Tool provides assistance to authors in checking for any Open Access mandates from their funder(s). More information on compliance with the Open Access policies of specific funders can be found here. Authors choosing to publish their article in an Open Access format through the Open Access service will be charged an Article Publication Charge (APC). The APC for an Oikos standard article can be found here. General information regarding licensing and copyright is available here.

Manuscript Referrals

Editors of Oikos have the option to offer authors a transfer to the NSO sister journals Nordic Journal of Botany and Journal of Avian Biology, and to the Wiley Open Access Journal Ecology and Evolution. NSO journals also participate in the Journal Transfer Networks provided by the publisher Wiley. Journal editors may recommend your manuscript to a more suitable Wiley journal via an expedited referral process. Transfers are offered to facilitate rapid publication of good quality research that is unable to be accepted by the original journal. Manuscripts of authors who opt for a referral will be automatically transferred, along with any related reviews, for consideration by the editorial team of the receiving journal.

Explore OIKOS

The journal is available at Wiley Online Library. Back issues are at JSTOR.

Oikos is an official journal of the Nordic Society Oikos, published in cooperation with Wiley.

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