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#Ecology open access journals
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Having just looked up the submission cost to the journal Ecology, I will be printing out 100 copies of my manuscript and handing it out on street corners instead of traditionally publishing. Much more cost effective and more people will read it that way.
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copepods · 1 year
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holy SHIT the dsmp real world example i. sorry idk if you like people reblogging your posts with massive additions so this is an ask.
l'manburg realistically would be a city-state since it's not big enough to be a full city, with the populace in about something the size of the Vatican (~5000-10000 people) supplied by fields and the river, which is the main source of their trade. like the new england colonies, they would have relied on water to send exports to other countries and traded with greater DSMP citizens. additionally, hewing to the new england 1770 vibe (which is p funny because of the hamilton jokes) they'd be shipmakers and craftspeople.
this also means that the dteam burning the redwood fields would have devastated their economy for at least a few years; additionally, as it's a walled city, siege tactics would have been very effective and probably devastating in terms of famine and disease if the l'manburgians could not keep river access open.
on politics - ik cc!wilbur talked about c!wilbur running the whole government but that is. impractical and also poor governance, since concentrating all power in one executive leads to a lack of accountability and transparency. ofc we didn't get to see this but i imagine c!wilbur had a cabinet of actual people running things but probably took on a Lot of engagements. if we're working with "the dteam caused an ecological catastrophe", newly independent l'manburg would have needed to import food until its reserves stabilized again. this, combined with its newness and very aggressive neighbor next door, would mean local prices skyrocket and food is. fairly expensive. if the l'manburgians had their own currency it would trade at rock bottom prices against the DSMP coin, even if c!wilbur pegged it to gold/silver. he'd probably make it fiat to stimulate the economy (assuming he Knows about the economy) which would skyrocket inflation. tl;dr l'manburg is in pretty shit shape and would be a Lot of work to get up and running.
on manburg - the coalition is unconstitutional but we're playing fast and loose with constitutionality anyway; i feel like c!quackity's candidacy would have appealed to the subset of l'manburg business interests who may have wanted freer borders and freer trade + lowering interest rates that protect domestic industry but raise prices. (early american economic policies were heavily protectionist and had high tariffs to protect the young industries as well). c!wilbur could have hit against this by calling c!quackity out of touch with the common citizen (which he was) and a carpetbagger (which he was). however, there are some legit claims of corruption that c!quackity could've made and framed himself as the young upstart clean changemaker - after all, c!wilbur was not open about the presidency.
however, c!schlatt's presidency would have been marred by suspicion and protests early on; if there were civil servants working in the white house, i can picture a bunch of them resigning in protest and writing Very Angry Op-Eds in l'manburg new york times about it. income inequality prob spikes as industrialists can trade but the cost of living jumps due to mismanagement and the manburg cabinet needs to deal with threats of terrorism (pogtopia). what's super interesting to explore is the journalism of l'manburg?
like l'manburg def had a very busy and thriving political commentary and journalism culture; c!wilbur is a wordsmith, etc. there's definitely some scathing cartoons and 'anonymous' pieces attacking all sides during the election, with increasingly bitter skits written about the manburg cabinet - schlatt, the insensate and alcoholic tyrant, and quackity, his airheaded and venal henchman. if schlatt and quackity's marriage leaked, there's a Lot of slut-shaming jokes directed at quackity, which p follow him into new l'manburg. slept his way to the top, has more experiencing bending over the resolute desk than sitting behind it.
ANYWAY that's all i have for now? this is such an interesting idea i would kill to talk about it more holy shit. l'manburg politics win
YEAHH YEAAAAAAAHH all of this i love it so much. politics and socioeconomics and how it intersects with the actions of wilbur schlatt quackity dteam everyone.... aaaaah
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sporesgalaxy · 1 year
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Tumblr keeps crashing each time I send this so I gotta be quick: do have any tips on how to study biology (college is not an option atm)
Oh boy! I will do my best!
I've listed the basic irl resources for biological information first, followed by some online resources.
I've got a strong Animalia bias, so apologies that I don't have any botany-specific sites for you. 😔
I'm sure there's some stuff I'm forgetting. I'll add on to this if I think of anything!
If there's anything specific you need help finding a reliable biological resource for, let me know and I will try my best to help find you something!
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Finding primary sources (stuff written by the scientists who did the research [i.e. a journal article]) is always very good, but reliable secondary resources (someone else summarizing other people's research [i.e. Wikipedia page, book]) can be very valuable as well.
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Meatspace Resources
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I would highly recommend checking to see if there is a Nature Park in your area! Nature parks often have volunteer programs and/or free educational opportunities. In my experience, naturalists are always very excited to meet new people interested in learning about local ecology!
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There's also Zoos and Aquariums of course, although I know they cost money and are typically geared more towards kids. I'm lucky to live near some nice ones. Maybe check if there are any special programs happening at Zoos/Aquariums in your area (by checking their website[s]), where you might learn more than you would on a normal day trip.
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Plus natural history museums, which usually have rotating exhibits so that you can keep learning new things when you come back! They also have more of an all-ages vibe than Zoos in my experience. Once again dependant on if there's one near you, and not free.
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Last but not least: the local library, although obviously not every published book is a flawless resource. Still, might be interesting to poke around! There's usually some sort of digital search catalogue to make finding things easier. Libraries are fun :)
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Online Resources
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Jstor is GREAT. Not all jstor articles are open access/free, but some are! And you can set a search filter to show you only things you can access.
One good way to find out what experts have written for other experts about biology: search a species name or biological concept or type of experimental study, etc. etc., in jstor's journal articles. I've linked a search for journal articles "I can access" containing the word "biology" as an example.
The website layout can feel a little obtuse at first but I think if you fiddle around with it a bit, it's not too bad to figure out? Feel free to kick my ass if I'm wrong djgjkeg
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Wikipedia is actually a very good place to introduce yourself to a lot of biological concepts. I would recommend checking out some of the sources yourself if you can-- usually at least some of them are free, and that can introduce you to new free resources for learning more (today I discovered bugguide.net!). Often they will link you to jstor.
But biology-focused wiki pages have a pretty good track record for Correct Information in my experience. The only issue I've run into is there being too little information sometimes.
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Pubmed is a really good resource to read biomedical scientific papers for free if that interests you at all! Reading scientific papers is a really important skill and I think you can pick up a lot just by diving in and googling words you don't know.
A well-designed experiment is replicable (that is, you can understand from the paper how they set things up to the point that you could do it yourself, given the resources). It's also important to pay attention to sample size. The more times you replicate any process in an experiment, the more likely you will be able to identify what the most common result really is, and why.
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Fishbase is a website I was introduced to in my icthyology class to find info about different fish species :) It kind of just dumps all the info on you in a big text wall, but many pages include great details about life cycle and diet that might go unmentioned on wiki pages.
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I've never used bugguide.net before today, but so far it seems solid and like it has a lot of good info. I assume it is similar to fishbase but for bugs
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EDIT: FREE ONLINE TEXTBOOKS I FORGOT ABOUT!!!
I used both of these for university classes at some point. I didn't use them much, so there may be issues I don't know about.
In my experience though they were solid resources, if a little confusingly worded at times. Bouncing between the textbooks and wikipedia tended to help me.
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sixth-extinction · 9 months
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Have you read the paper that proposes the ivory-billed woodpecker is still alive?
I think that people really want to believe the birds are still out there. I’m personally skeptical unless I see hard evidence proving their existence.
The pictures in the paper are pretty low quality and aren’t really enough to make that judgment, IMO.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.10017
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typhlonectes · 2 years
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Wild Stingrays making sounds beneath the waves
Stingrays: no longer the silent residents of the sea! 
Our new Journal of Ecology paper provides the first evidence of not one but TWO species of #stingray actively producing sounds 🔊 
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3812 
We present 3 examples of sound production by wild stingrays - one of an adult mangrove whipray (Urogymnus granulatus) in #Indonesia by #scuba diver Philip Christoff, a juvenile mangrove whipray at #MagneticIsland in the #GreatBarrierReef by biologist and photographer Javier Delgado Esteban, and an adult cowtail stingray (Pastinachus ater) at #HeronIsland the Great Barrier Reef by marine biologist and photographer Johnny Gaskell.
The sounds are characterised by short, sharp 'clicks' and likely serve as a warning or defence signal. Both species often form large groups, so it may alert others to potential danger, suggesting a role in intraspecific communication! The mechanism is still unclear 🤔 but it appears they are produced through rapid movement of the jaw or head and spiracles behind the eye. 
 Almost 990 species of bony #fish have been shown to actively produce sounds, but until now #elasmobranchs (sharks, rays, and skates) have been considered silent. We show that this is a misconception, and more #research into this ability is needed! Turns out we have much to learn about life beneath the waves... 
 Given these observations were captured opportunistically by different people, we expect more to come to light in these and possibly by other species. If you've seen something similar, please get in touch! 
 The paper is fairly short and you don't need specialist skills to understand most of it, so do take a read & let us know what you think 👍. 
The early view pre-typesetting version is up now here:
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3812 
(all versions will be open access and free to read)
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grainelevator · 2 months
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hello, do you have reccommendations for books about the great lakes region or ecology in general? thank you!
I read textbooks and other reference books from the public library in my town, so I recommend you see if they have any academic literature there. There are also open access textbooks you can find online. Field guides for the Great Lakes region are available as well, I have a few including Mammals of the Great Lakes Region by Allen Kurta.
There’s also the Journal of Landscape Ecology, which is open access:
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fatehbaz · 1 year
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In reality, the Atlantic coastal forest is a garden [...]. It is absurd. It is as if a glass divider separated, on one side, the experience of the fruition of life, and on the other, the place from which we originate. This division reveals another, more profound divorce: the idea that humans are different from everything that exists on earth. [...] The Amazon rainforest is a monument. A monument built over thousands of years. The ecology of that place in motion creates shapes, volumes -- disperses all that beauty. The Amazon rainforest, the Atlantic coastal forest, the Serra do Mar, the Takrukkrak are monuments that have, for us, the power to open a portal that accesses other visions of the world. The forest provides this. And yet, despite its materiality -- its body that can be felled, uprooted as wood -- the forest is not seen. In Brazil, there are cities that UNESCO has declared the cultural patrimony of humanity. Meanwhile, we destroy the Atlantic coastal forest, the Amazon rainforest. It’s a game of illusion. The fact that we live in the region of the world where it is still possible to sprout people from within the forest is magic. There are people who look at this as a type of delay in relation to the globalized world: “We should already have civilized everyone.” But it is not a delay, it is a magic possibility! [...]
In the spring, a season they loved, the Botocudos ascended along the Doce River to the steep slopes of the Espinhaço Mountains [...]. The culmination of the period is September 22, when the sky is very high and the seasons pass from winter into spring. The mountains bloom, it’s beautiful. The Botocudo families, having come from different hillsides, from the Serra da Piedade, traveled to the Espinhaço to experience this cycle deeply. There is a lot of inscription about this engraved on rocks throughout that entire region. Have you ever noticed, on the slopes of Conceição do Mato Dentro, how wonderful the Tabuleiro waterfall is? The slopes of the Tabuleiro are a tremendous library! Once I stopped there to watch the sunset, until it grew dark. I stayed looking at the different stories on those slopes. It is the history of the passage of our ancestors through those sites some thousands of years ago, as archeological studies have already confirmed. [...] Our history is interlaced with the history of the world. But the country throws away this history. People who travel to these places drive pickaxes into the boulders [...]. Each fragment, each piece that they pull up from those rocks is as if they ripped out a page or stole a book from the library.
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Words of: Ailton Krenak. As published by Ailton Krenak and Mauricio Meirelles. “Our Worlds Are at War.” e-flux Journal Issue #110. June 2020. As described by e-flux: “The following testimony by Ailton Krenak, a longtime Indigenous activist and intellectual in Brazil, was originally published in the December 2019 issue of the Brazilian magazine Olympia: Literatura e Arte. The testimony was related orally to Jose Eduardo Goncalves and Mauricio Meirelles, and then transcribed.”
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prose2passion · 1 year
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A beetle that has devastated European conifer trees uses chemical signals produced by a beneficial symbiotic fungus to identify suitable host trees, according to a study by Dineshkumar Kandasamy at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Germany and colleagues, publishing February 21st in the open access journal PLOS Biology.
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barry-kent-mackay · 1 year
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The Lappet-faced Vulture (Torgos tracheliotos) is distributed throughout many parts of Africa, mostly in arid, open country. Sadly, they have recently been classified as endangered. Big and powerful and in the same family as the eagles, they are known to take live prey, although mostly they are, like other vultures, consumers of carrion.
I was first made aware of the species when, as a kid, I came across a copy of a book called Artist Naturalist in Ethiopia, in the library of the Royal Ontario Museum’s well known bird curator, James L. Baillie. The book contains journal notes by American bird artist Louis Agassiz Fuertes, on a wildlife collecting expedition to Ethiopia, along with a variety of paintings of birds painted quickly from live or freshly dead specimens – mostly species I was then unaware of. The paintings had to be done quickly, under field conditions, and impressed me very much. In those days colour photography was nascent, and since the colours of un-feathered parts of birds could change quickly after death, and never be preserved accurately in museum specimens, artists would record them in what were called “soft-part studies”. Fuertes died tragically in a level crossing accident soon after his return from Africa, adding poignancy to the art he created.
Since then, I’ve been to Africa myself, and the “soft part” colours of birds are less of a mystery and more easily accessed by artists. In the case of this species, they vary significantly between individuals, as does the configuration of the head, and the various wattles and carbuncles and feathering or lack thereof on the head. But the species lives up to its name by having a fold of skin to other side of the upper neck, as I have shown in this portrait.
Many people deem bare-headed birds such as vultures, turkeys and guineafowl as “ugly”. I hope this study helps to show the bird as I see it, accurately, I trust, but also as an important part of the ecological whole, inherently dignified, performing its functions within the context of a world primal and more natural than what we contrive for ourselves with steel, concrete, glass and plastic. They are the current manifestation of a three billion year journey of evolution. To me they are beautiful, magnificent and a worthy subject I greatly enjoyed painting.
Lappet-faced Vultures have weighed in at over twenty pounds, making them one of the largest of raptors still extant. Long may they soar over the hot savannah.
This painting is in oils on a canvas panel, 12 by 9 inches.
art may be used for non-commercial purposes with attribution
prints and original art for sale on Fine Art America
support barry kent mackay on ko-fi
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The Night Gardener
It is commonly known that the greenhouse is one of the homes of the courts. That is the greenhouse that people know about.
As the sun begins to slide low behind the horizon, a faint outline of a smaller greenhouse can be seen at the very edge of the forest. This is the home of the Night Gardener.
She goes by many names to those that know of her. The Willow Maiden. The Masked Florist.
As the moon rises, the outline sharpens. Clear panes of glass set within a wooden frame form a small yet elegant greenhouse. Small pinpricks of golden light float about it. No one knows their source.
If you have seen it, you are lucky. She has chosen to reveal herself.
She is quite shy. The Night Gardener shows herself to few, and interacts with less. The quiet ones she likes. Botany, ecology, and art majors especially.
The Night Gardener comes to you. Walking towards the greenhouse is impossible. It is always slightly out of reach. Should she wish to speak to you, a small stone path will appear, visible to none but the chosen.
Respecting and showing respect to the Night Gardener is respecting nature. Too many have attempted to be courteous to her through words, rather than action. She likes compliments, yes, but picking up a piece of litter is worth more than ten to her.
Walking down the path is the only access point to her garden. Outside the simple door, she will stand. A wooden mask adorns her face. It was a gift, long ago, from one of her apprentices. Intricately carved, it completely obscures her face. Two sets of antlers protrude from her head, and large ears similar to that of deer replace human ears. Her hair is flowing vines reaching to the floor. A snowy white cloak pinned at one shoulder covers her entire body.
This is the moment at which the Night Gardener judges you. Silently, she looks you over. Words should not be exchanged in his time, for it is a period of study for the Night Gardener.
Should she reject you, you will wake in bed with no memory of the prior interaction, save for the sight of the greenhouse. Acceptance does not come easy.
Should you win her approval, she will lead you into the greenhouse. While following is a choice, this opportunity would forever disappear should you leave. The Night Gardener would never again show herself to you should you deny her teaching.
Inside, the greenhouse is bursting with life. While it appears small, the space inside is vast.
Trees create an emerald canopy, moss hanging gracefully from many of their boughs. Vines creep up the sides, many blooming with flowers of impossible, unnamable colors. More flowers bloom throughout the space, lining the worn stone pathways. In the center of the garden, there is a pond. Lily pads float in it, as well as other aquatic flora. The water is still and smooth.
Glowing lantern-like plants hand from the trees, illuminating the entire greenhouse. The air is warm and humid. The air smells of all things green, of pine, petrichor, moss, water, and a subtly pleasant floral aroma.
As you follow the Night Gardener, the faint sound of clacking on the rocks makes you wonder if the Night Gardener is hooved. She is, though near none have ever seen them.
Towards the back of the greenhouse is a raised stone platform, with a small oak desk in the center. Shelves crammed with books (mostly about botany, though there are several books of poetry and art tucked between them) float around the desk. There are several worn books open on the table, as well as a journal with foreign characters written within. The Night Gardener sits down on a comfortable looking worn wooden chair.
“Sit.” The Night Gardener speaks. Her voice is soft and gentle. Somehow, it sounds like wind in the trees and leaves falling.
There is one chair.
Slowly, green shoots appear from cracks in the stone platform. They rise and weave together, forming a chair.
“I wish to take you as my apprentice. You interest me, human. Should you accept, meet me here at midnight tomorrow. Should you not show up tomorrow, I will wipe all your memories of me.” The Night Gardener stated simply.
Your vision turned dark at the edges.
The last words you heard were, “Meet me at midnight.”
You woke in your bed, wearing yesterday’s clothes. You wondered if last night had been a dream, but then you felt something in your pocket. You put your hand into your pocket and pulled out a small piece of yellowed paper.
It said:
“Meet me at midnight.
-M.B.”
Attached to it was a small replica of the Night Gardener’s mask on a loop of vine.
A/n: all credit for Elsewhere University goes to @elsewhereuniversity.
Art:
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twiainsurancegroup · 2 months
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Exploring Ecological Health and Human Well-being through Interdisciplinary Research in Environmental Science and Toxicology
Welcome to International Journal of Scientific Research in Environmental Science and Toxicology, a scholarly platform dedicated to advancing our understanding of the intricate relationship between the environment and human health. Our journal serves as a catalyst for multidisciplinary research, fostering collaboration among scientists, researchers, and policymakers committed to addressing environmental challenges. At Scientific Research in Environmental Science and Toxicology, our mission is to contribute to the global dialogue on environmental sustainability and human well-being. Through rigorous research and open dissemination, we aim to provide valuable insights that inform environmental policies, promote sustainable practices, and safeguard ecosystems and human health.
Key Features:
Interdisciplinary Approach: We embrace a broad spectrum of environmental science and toxicology topics, encouraging research that spans disciplines to address complex environmental challenges.
Impactful Research: Our commitment to publishing high-quality and impactful research ensures that our journal serves as a reputable resource for the global scientific community and decision-makers.
Open Access Philosophy: Recognizing the importance of accessibility, we believe in the power of open access to democratize knowledge, enabling researchers worldwide to benefit from the latest discoveries in our field.
Global Collaboration: Scientific Research in Environmental Science and Toxicology is a hub for global collaboration. We welcome contributions from researchers around the world, fostering a diverse and inclusive community that collectively strives towards a sustainable and healthier planet.
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zoonosesjournal · 5 months
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Zoonoses Journal | An Open Access Journal from Zoonotic Diseases
Zoonoses Journal is a renowned publication dedicated to the study, research, and dissemination of knowledge related to zoonotic diseases. Zoonoses are infectious diseases that can be transmitted between animals and humans, posing significant public health challenges globally. This esteemed journal serves as a platform for scientists, researchers, healthcare professionals, and experts in the field to share their findings, insights, and advancements in understanding, preventing, and managing zoonotic diseases.
The journal covers a wide spectrum of topics, including but not limited to:
Epidemiology and Surveillance: Analyzing the prevalence, distribution, and patterns of zoonotic diseases in animal populations and humans. This involves tracking outbreaks, identifying risk factors, and implementing surveillance strategies.
Pathogens and Transmission: Investigating the microbes, viruses, bacteria, parasites, and fungi responsible for zoonotic diseases. Understanding their modes of transmission between animals and humans is crucial for developing preventive measures.
One Health Approach: Emphasizing the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health to address zoonotic diseases. Collaboration among diverse disciplines such as veterinary medicine, public health, ecology, and microbiology is pivotal in combating these diseases.
Prevention and Control Strategies: Evaluating vaccination programs, control measures, and interventions to reduce the incidence and impact of zoonotic diseases. This includes research on antimicrobial resistance, hygiene practices, and public health policies.
Emerging Zoonoses: Examining newly discovered or re-emerging zoonotic diseases, their potential for global spread, and the challenges they pose to healthcare systems and society.
Zoonoses Journal publishes original research articles, reviews, case studies, and perspectives, providing a comprehensive understanding of zoonotic diseases and their implications for public health. Its interdisciplinary approach fosters collaboration and knowledge exchange among experts worldwide, contributing to the development of effective strategies for disease prevention, control, and management.
The journal serves as a vital resource for policymakers, healthcare professionals, veterinarians, researchers, and anyone interested in staying updated on the latest advancements in zoonoses, ultimately aiming to mitigate the impact of these diseases on both animal and human populations.
Contact Us:
Visit Us: https://zoonoses-journal.org/
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literaturepublisher10 · 7 months
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Journal of Medical Case Reports
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Journal of Medical Case Reports accepting case reports in medical science journal, medical case reports journal, journals accepting medical case reports, journals publishing medical case reports etc. Journal publishes methods of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of diseases. The practice of medicine involves multidisciplinary study and application of concepts of several branches of biomedical sciences, genetics, microbiology, immunology etc. Furthermore, practice of medicine also requires a thorough knowledge of pharmaceutical sciences and surgery. It also takes the help of other therapies like physiotherapy, psychotherapy and preventive medicine. Medicine research is therefore, an intricate subject that has multiple facets, each of which needs to be addressed in great detail before a specific diagnostic or therapeutic method is standardized for large scale application.
Journal Homepage: https://www.literaturepublishers.org/
Manuscript Submission
Authors are requested to submit their manuscript by using Online Manuscript Submission Portal:
https://www.literaturepublishers.org/submit.html
(or) also invited to submit through the Journal E-mail Id: [email protected]
American Journal of Phytomedicine and Clinical Therapeutics: American Journal of Phytomedicine and Clinical Therapeutics is an open access peer reviewed and monthly published research journal that publishes articles in the field of Phytomedicine and Clinical Therapeutics. It is an international journal to encourage research publication to research scholars, academicians, professionals and students engaged in their respective field.
Related Journals: Herbal Medicine: Open Access, Natural Products Chemistry & Research, American Journal of Drug Delivery and Therapeutics
Translational Biomedicine
Translational Biomedicine: Translational Biomedicine is an international open access, peer-reviewed academic journal. The Journal publishes original science-based research that advances communication between the scientific discovery and health improvement. Translational Biomedicine publishes Original research and/or commentary on diseases with implications for treatment Clinical translation where scientific ideas are translated into clinical trials or applications, Nutrition research: the interaction and validation between research and application Perspectives and Reviews on current basic science or clinical science research topics Survey of recent significant published findings. Journal Highlights Includes: Translational Biomedical Research, Translational Research and Clinical Intervention, Translational Stroke, Translational Neurology, Translational Oncology, Translational imaging, Translational Psychiatry, Orthopedic Translation, Stem Cell Translation Medicine, Translation Proteomics, Translational Neuroscience, Translational Cancer Research, Discovery Biology, Medical Biotechnology.
Related Journals: Translational Cancer Research, Orthopedic Translation, Translational Proteomics, Translational Biomedical Research, Translational Neuroscience, Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology, Molecular Therapy, Stem Cell Translation, Translational Biomedical Research, Translational Clinical Research
American Journal of Ethnomedicine
American Journal of Ethnomedicine: American Journal of Ethnomedicine is an open access, peer-reviewed, bimonthly, online journal that aims to promote the exchange of original knowledge and research in any area of ethnomedicine.
American Journal of Ethnomedicine invites research articles and reviews based on original interdisciplinary studies on the inextricable relationships between human cultures and nature/universe, Traditional Environmental/Ecological Knowledge (TEK), folk and traditional medical knowledge, as well as the relevance of these for environmental and public health policies.
Specifically, the journal will cover the following topics: ethnobotany, ethnomycology, ethnozoology, ethnoecology (including ethnopedology), ethnometereology/ ethnoclimatology, ethnoastronomy, ethnopharmacy, ethnomedicine, ethnoveterinary, traditional medicines, traditional healthcare in households and domestic arenas, migrant healthcare/urban ethnobiology, pluralistic healthcare in developing countries, evidence-based community health, visual ethnobiology and ethnomedicine, gender studies and ethnobiology, as well as other related areas in environmental, nutritional, medical and visual anthropology. Botanically-centered manuscripts must clearly indicate voucher specimens and herbaria.
Journal of Biomedical Sciences
Journal of Biomedical Sciences: Journal of Biomedical Sciences is an international, peer reviewed journals which publishes high quality of article and novel research contribution to scientific knowledge. The Journal of Biomedical Sciences is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that encompasses all fundamental and molecular aspects of basic medical sciences, emphasizing on providing the molecular studies of biomedical problems and molecular mechanisms. The Journal of Biomedical Sciences gives an area to share the information among the medical scientists and researchers
Journal highlights includes: Cognitive and neurosciences, Biochemical engineering, Molecular biology, Gas transport and metabolism, Cardiac assist devices, Vascular autoregulation, Protein science, Structural biology, Biomedical ultrasound, Neuroengineering, Heart mechanics, Biomedical science, Genetics
Related Journals: Biomedicine Journal, Biomedical Science and Engineering Journal, Medicine Journal, Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical sciences, Journal of Biomedical sciences and Research, Journal of Biomedical Research, Neurology Journal, Biomedical Engineering Journal, Cellular Biology Journal, Alzheimer?s Disease Journal, Clinical Immunology Journal, Genetics and Genomics Research Journal, Archives of Medicine Journal, Journal of Clinical & Biomedical Sciences, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuroscience Journals, Behavioral Sciences journal, Journal of Neuroscience & Cognition,  Journal of Psychology, Journals of Gerontology 
Journal of Regenerative Medicine
Journal of Regenerative Medicine: Regenerative Medicine journal covers wide range of topics such as regenerative medicine therapies, stem cell applications, tissue engineering, gene and cell therapies, translational medicine and tissue regeneration etc. The journal provides hybrid access platform to publish the original research articles, review articles, case reports, short communications, etc and provides the rapid dissemination of significant research in various disciplines encompassing all areas of stem cells and regenerative medicine.
Journal Highlights: Cell and Organ Regeneration, Cell Engineering, Cellular Therapies, Diagnostics and Imaging, Ethical and Legal Issues, Gene Therapies, Human Pathological Conditions, Immunotherapy, Models of Regeneration, Nanoscaffolds in Regenerative Medicine, Regenerative Biology, Rejuvenation, Stem Cell Transplantation, Stem Cell Treatments, Stem Cells, Tissue Engineering, Tissue Repair and Regeneration, Translational Medicine, Translational Medicines, Translational Science, etc.
Related Journals: Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine, Journal of Regenerative Medicine & Tissue Engineering, International Journal of Stem Cells, Stem Cell Research, Journal of Stem Cell Research & Therapy, Stem Cell Biology and Research, Biomaterials, Cardiovascular Journals, Cell Biology Journals, Hematology Journals, Liver Journals
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ethology-conservation · 7 months
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linguistlist-blog · 10 months
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Calls: General Linguistics / Arbitrer (Jrnl)
Call for Papers: Jurnal Arbitrer Vol 10. No. 3 2023 Journal Arbitrer is an open access journal published by Linguistics Society of Universitas Andalas. Jurnal Arbitrer's main goal is to promote multilingualism by presenting research on language policy, minority and less widely taught languages, linguistic rights, language ecology, pluralistic approach to languages, acquisition and development of plurilingual competence, interdisciplinary language sensitive teaching, mediation, intercultural di http://dlvr.it/StQFTM
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