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Download Apidologie instructions to authors in PDF format.
Submission of a paper implies that
it reports original unpublished work,
that it has not been accepted and is
not under consideration for publication
elsewhere. All authors must have
read and approved the manuscript.
- Types of articles
- Submission of manuscripts
- Peer review process
- Electronic-only material
- Open Access Option
- Proofs and reprints
- Copyright
- Template for Apidologie
1. Types of articles
The journal Apidologie publishes
original articles, review articles, scientific
notes, proceedings of scientific
meetings, and extensive bibliographies
in English. Original and
review articles have an abstract in
English and a general summary in
German.
Submission of a paper implies that
it reports original unpublished work,
that it has not been accepted and is
not under consideration for publication
elsewhere. All authors must have
read and approved the manuscript.
A - Original articles: they should be
no longer than ten pages as a rule, i.e.
about 30 000 characters (spaces excluded),
including tables and figures
(see template for more information).
B - Review articles: Their length is
limited to about 60 000 characters,
spaces excluded. See template for
more information but the usual division
into ’materials and methods, results
and discussion’ may be replaced
by a more adapted structure.
C - Proceedings of scientific meetings:
Summaries of communications
are limited to 1 700 characters, spaces
excluded. They have no chapters,
bibliographic references, tables nor
acknowledgments and are published
by prior arrangement with the Editorial
Board.
D - Scientific notes: Apidologie publishes
brief notes to report information
and observation of preliminary
nature 1) for which additional data
cannot be easily obtained or 2) which
have an exceptional scientific interest.
The length of such notes will be
strictly restricted to two pages (about
5 500 characters, spaces excluded)
and publication will depend on the
availability of space in the journal
and general interest to readers of Apidologie.
This form is intended to augment
scientific communication and
is by no means for articles that are
not of sufficient rigor to be published
as full papers. All submissions must include ’scientific note’ in the title.
Only the title is translated into French
and German.
E- Extensive bibliographies: A twopage
synopsis or introduction is published
in the printed version, the
bibliography itself being available
online only. Before preparation and
submission of such bibliographies,
authors are advised to contact the
Editorial office. References are published
in HTML format in addition to
PDF format.
2. Submission of manuscripts
Manuscripts should be submitted
via the Manuscript Management
System (MMS) at: https://mms-inra.edpsciences.org/is/apido/. Please
follow the instructions displayed on
the screen after accessing the website.
To register your submission, you
need to enter your author identifier
(ID). This is a unique and confidential
number that is attributed to you
upon your first submission to Apidologie.
If you publish regularly with
us, please note your author ID for
future reference.
Manuscripts should comply with the
Instructions
and be submitted
as a unique PDF file containing
text, references, tables and figures
(RTF or Word files can be also accepted
if need be). The file should
be labelled with the corresponding
author’s name, for example: Martin-
2007-apido.pdf.
The manuscript should be typed in
Times (12) double-spaced with margins
of 3 cm at top, bottom and
sides for editor’s markings. Lines and
pages should be numbered. Use italics
only for latin names of organisms
The Editorial board requests that
authors whose native language is
not English have their manuscripts
checked by an English-speaking colleague
prior to submission. The
Editorial Board maintains the option
of returning, before evaluation,
manuscripts which do not meet the
instructions and/or acceptable standards
of English.
Upon acceptance, the format required
for text and tables is RTF or Word and for figures TIFF
or EPS. Upload it through MMS
at https://mms-inra.edpsciences.org/is/apido/.
3. Peer review process
All manuscripts are examined initially
by Apidologie scientific editors
for their appropriateness to the
journal. Those which do not match
the scope of Apidologie or are of
insufficient general interest are sent
back promptly to their authors. Other
manuscripts are sent to a minimum
of two experts chosen by the handling
editor. Reviewers are invited to
present their comments and/or suggestions
within 4 weeks after reception
of the manuscript. Reviewers’
comments are sent to the authors
without their names to remain anonymous.
Final acceptance is a decision
of the handling editor and is based on
the reviewers’ reports and the editorial
board advice.
In case of revision, the authors must
indicate in which ways the comments
and suggestions were taken
into account or why they were not
taken into account. The corrected version
should be returned to the handling
editor within 3 months after
the decision has been made. After
this delay, it will be considered as
a new manuscript. Depending on the
handling editor’s decision, revised
manuscripts may be sent out to reviewers
a second time.
4. Electronic-only material
Electronic-only material is designed
to provide supplementary information
that is either too voluminous for
printing or that is designed specifically
for the Web, such as illustration
in colour. Electronic-only material
may include but is not restricted
to: (Large) tables; Appendices; Programmes;
Images; Videos. This option
should be used whenever possible
to reduce the length of the printed
papers. Electronic-only material must
be submitted together with the body
of the manuscript for evaluation. For
more information on the submission
of this material (file requirements,
etc.), please contact the production
office at:
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5. Open Access Option
To favour a broad and easy access
to all published scientific information,
Apidologie and its publisher
EDP Sciences uses a service called
Open Access Option (OAO). It offers
the possibility for authors to
make their papers freely available to
all interested readers (subscribers or
non subscribers) as soon as the articles
are published online. Otherwise,
the policy of the journal is to have
all articles made freely accessible 18
months after the print date. Authors
who are interested in OAO should
fill out the form that is sent with
the proofs and return it with the corrected
proofs. Authors (or their institution)
should make a contribution,
Price (550 € in 2008) covers only a
fraction of the editing costs.
6. Proofs and reprints
Proofs will be sent by electronic mail
to the author for correspondence indicated
on the title page. They should
be carefully corrected and returned
to the publisher within 48 h of reception.
If this period is exceeded,
the galleys will be proofed only by
the editorial staff of the publishing
house and printed without the authors’
corrections. Should substantial
changes in the original manuscript be
requested (other than typographical
errors), they will be made at the author’s
expense. The PDF file is provided
free of charge to the corresponding
author. An order form for
reprints – and, if required, for the
publication of colour figures – will
accompany the proofs.
7. Copyright
The author returns the signed transfer
of copyright and publishing agreement
form with the corrected proofs..
Authors are allowed to make their articles
available on personal sites, or
their institution’s website and Open
Archive Initiative sites, provided the
source of the published article is cited
and the ownership of the copyright
clearly mentioned. These sites must
be non-profit sites. Reprint and postprint
may be used (with the publisher’s
PDF).
Authors are requested to create a link
to the published article in the publisher’s
internet service.
The link must be accompanied
by the following text “The original
publication is available at
http://www.apidologie.org/.”
Requests for reproduction should be
sent to the publisher:
EDP Sciences
17, avenue du Hoggar
P.A. de Courtaboeuf, BP 112
91944 Les Ulis Cedex A (France)
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8. Template for Apidologie
8.1. General presentation
The manuscript should be typed in
Times 12 double-spaced with margins
of at least 3 cm at the top, bottom
and sides for editor’s markings. Lines
and pages should be numbered.
Title
Authors: Forenames (in full) and
SURNAMES of each author*
Address of all authors
Email of all authors
*Corresponding author: this author
being identified by an asterisk: detailed
postal address, phone and fax
numbers.
Short Title: no more than 45 characters,
including spaces.
The manuscript should be arranged
as follows: title page, abstract and
keywords, introduction, materials
and methods, results, discussion, acknowledgments,
general summary
(to be translated into German), references,
figure captions, tables, figures.
Tables and figures, with their captions,
should not appear in the text,
but be placed together on separate
sheets at the end of the manuscript.
Abbreviations should be punctuated.
Uppercase letters should be accentued,
small capital should not be
used.
Abstract
The abstract (no more than 850 characters,
spaces excluded) should be
in a form suitable for abstracting
services. It should contain no paragraphs,
footnotes, references, crossreferences
to figures and tables and
undefined abbreviations.
Keywords
Up to five keywords should be supplied,
they may be taken from the
title, abstract or text. The plural
form and uppercase letters should be
avoided. Keywords should be written
in bold lowercase letters, separated
by slashes.
1. Introduction
Section headings should be numbered
following the international
numbering system (1., 1.1., 1.1.1.,
etc.).
- Materials and Methods
- Results
- Discussion
Acknowledgements
General summary (for translation
into German)
This summary (10% of the length of
the article, excluding abstract and references,
but not to exceed 2500 characters,
spaces excluded) is intended
for a general audience and should be
written in non-technical language. It
should mention the aim of the study,
place it in the scientific context, provide
brief information about methods
and sufficient information on results
(with reference to the tables and figures),
and lastly the discussion and
conclusion. It should be written in
English and will be translated into
German by the editorial office.
8.2. References
In the text, refer to author(s) name(s)
and year of publication. When there
are more than two authors, give the
first author’s name followed by et al.
References cited together in the text
should be arranged chronologically.
Ex.: (Smith, 1979, 1980; Anderson
and Smith, 1982a; Anderson et al.,
1985).
In the reference list, the references
should appear in alphabetical order.
If there is more than one author, the
order is as follows: publications of
a single author in chronological order;
publications of the same author
with one co-author in chronological
order; publications of the author with
more than one co-author in chronological
order.
Proceedings of articles submitted for
publication, unpublished data, personal
communications should not appear
in the reference list but should
be cited in the text as “unpubl. data”.
All entries in the reference list must
correspond to references in the text
and vice versa.
The titles of journals should be abbreviated
according to the rules
of Biosciences Information Service
(Biosis) or those of the Liste
d’abréviations de mots des titres de
publications en série (conforming to
ISO 4, Centre international de ISSN,
Paris). Words for which no abbreviation
is given should be written in
full.Examples are given below of the
layout and punctuation to be used in
the references:
Article:
Anderson D.L., Trueman J.W.H.
(2000) Varroa jacobsoni (Acari: Varroidae)
is more than one species, Exp.
Appl. Acarol. 24, 165–189.
Book:
Ruttner F. (1988) Biogeography and
taxonomy of honeybees, Springer
Verlag, Berlin.
Chapter in a book:
Southwick E.E. (1993) Biology and
social physiology of the honey bee,
in: Graham J.M. (Ed.), The hive and
the honey bee, Dadant and Sons,
Hamilton, Illinois, pp. 171–196.
Electronic material:
Bogdanov S. (1999) Water content:
comparison of refractometric methods
with the Karl Fisher method,
Annu. Meet. Int. Honey Comm. Dijon,
[online] http://www.apis.admin.
ch/host/honey/minutes.htm (accessed
on 16 August 2004).
For all other kinds of documents,
please contact the managing editor
(
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).
8.3. Figures and Tables
Illustrations should be numbered in
Arabic numerals for figures and Roman
numerals for tables, and should
be referred to in the text by their
number: Fig. 1, Tab. I. Lettering
(symbols, numbers, etc., preferably in
Arial font,) should not differ from figure
to figure and should be of sufficient
size to remain legible after
reduction (letters 1–2 mm high after
reduction to either one (6.5 cm)
or two column (13.5 cm) format).
Figures should be presented in the
form of drawings on drawing or tracing
paper or as sharp glossy prints.
Half-tones should contain good contrast
and should be originals (i.e.
not already reproduced); line drawings
should have a white background.
Photographs should be presented in
the form of plates to be reproduced
without reduction (maximum
size 13.5 x 20 cm). The lettering
should not be placed any closer to the
edges than 1 cm. The figure captions
should be explicit so that the illustrations
are comprehensible without reference
to the text.
In the paper version of the journal,
figures are in black and white (for
colour, authors should make a contribution,
prices on request), but they
appear in colour in the electronic
version. Tables should not exceed 84
characters per line (140 if in landscape
format). The title of each table
should be written above the corresponding
table. Figures and tables
published elsewhere cannot be accepted
without the prior consent of
the publisher and the author(s).
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