
2008 Impact Factor 1.813!
Ecology of Freshwater Fish
Edited by:
Javier Lobón-Cervia, Asbjørn Vøllestad and David C. Heins
ISI Journal Citation Reports® Ranking: 2008: 6/40 Fisheries; 26/87 Marine & Freshwater Biology
Impact Factor: 1.813
The journal publishes original articles on all aspects of fish ecology and fishery sciences in lakes, rivers and estuaries, including ecologically oriented studies of behaviour, genetics and physiology and the conservation, development and management of recreational and commercial fisheries. Reports of studies examining ecological questions in an evolutionary framework are published as well, including research papers addressing evolutionary ecology, behavioral ecology, population ecology, and population biology. Papers dealing with the life stages of anadromous and catadromous species in estuaries and inshore coastal zones are also published if they contribute to the general understanding of fish ecology. Theoretical papers and studies of impact assessment and modeling are published if they generate testable hypotheses about real systems (fish communities, populations and/or species) or if published data are re-analysed to produce novel conclusions or syntheses. Articles, letters and reviews are published based on their scientific content. Occasionally, the proceedings of conferences and symposia are published if they are relevant and timely.
TopNews and Announcements
Online production tracking is now available for your article through Blackwell's Author Services
Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Click here to read more.
Online Manuscript Submission
You can now submit your manuscript to Ecology of Freshwater Fish online, with our new manuscript submission website. The online manuscript submission and review process promises to lead to faster submission to first decision times and greater simplicity for authors and reviewers. Submit your best manuscript to Ecology of Freshwater Fish.
Virtual Issue
Editor's choice for the delegates of the 2007 SEFS conference July 2007 - click here to access
Online Content Now Available Back to Volume 1
All back issues of this journal are available online. For further information on how to access these issues please visit our Librarian Site.
Letters Section
Click here to read the first three Letters papers published in Ecology of Freshwater Fish
Free access in the Developing World
Access to this journal is available free online within institutions in the developing world through the AGORA Initiative with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and the OARE Initiative (Online Access to Research in the Environment) with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
Articles Published Online Ahead of Print
Articles which have been fully copy-edited and peer-reviewed are published online through our EarlyView feature before the print edition of this journal is published.
Online Open
Authors of articles in this journal can now choose to make their articles open access and available free for all readers through the payment of an author fee. Read more.
NIH Public Access Mandate
For those interested in the Wiley-Blackwell policy on the NIH Public Access Mandate, please visit our policy statement.
TopHighlights
Free Files to Download
Here are a selection of articles which reflect the scope and level of commendable research recently published in the journal. These articles, selected by the Editors, are free content in the online:
Hierarchical faunal filters: an approach to assessing effects of habitat and nonnative species on native fishes
M. C. Quist, F. J. Rahel, W. A. Hubert
Discrimination of the natal origin of young-of-the-year Allis shad (Alosa alosa) in the Garonne-Dordogne basin (south-west France) using otolith chemistry
J. Tomás, S. Augagneur, E. Rochard
Lipid energy reserves influence life-history decision of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and brown trout (S. trutta) in fresh water
B. Jonsson, N. Jonsson
Foraging behaviour and invasiveness: do invasive Gambusia exhibit higher feeding rates and broader diets than their noninvasive relatives?
J. S. Rehage, B. K. Barnett, A. Sih
The direct contribution of fish to lake phosphorus cycles
D. Griffiths
Population consequences of behaviour in the European bitterling (Rhodeus sericeus Cyprinidae)
C. Smith, M. Reichard, A. Douglas, P. Jurajda
Divergent, genetically based feeding behaviour of two sympatric Arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L.), morphs
A. Klemetsen, R. Knudsen, R. Primicerio, P.-A. Amundsen
Standardising multi-laboratory microsatellite data in Pacific salmon: an historical view of the future
P. Moran, D. J. Teel, E. S. LaHood, J. Drake, S. Kalinowski
Links to Related Sites
Blackwell Ecology - Blackwell Publishing's ecology subject site
Ecological Society of Australia
The British Ecological Society
South African Institute of Ecologists and Environmental Scientists
Ecological Society of Germany, Austria and Switzerland
Italian Society of Ecology
PISCES Conservation Ltd
