Instructions to Authors  
       

 

Manuscript Submission

The Bulletin accepts monographs, reviews and articles, notes, discussions and replies, and novel research gear, instrument, device, system, or software/package with potential to advance marine research (“Research Tools in Marine Science”). Additionally, the Bulletin publishes informative stand-alone artwork with accompany text in its section “Portraits of Marine Science.”

Manuscripts are accepted via an online submission and peer-review process. The submission of a manuscript will be taken to imply that the manuscript is original and has not been submitted or published elsewhere in its present or modified form. Other matters should be sent to the Editorial Office, Bulletin of Marine Science, Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric & Earth Science, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami, Florida 33149-1031 USA or emailed to <bms.editorial@miami.edu>.


Manuscript types:

Research Papers. Articles describing novel research. There are no length limits, though article length should be justified by the content. Beyond novel research, original articles can also include reviews, replies, perspectives, and monographs.

Notes. A brief article describing novel research, but more limited in scope to justify submission as a full article. Notes should have a maximum of 2000 words (not including abstract, literature cited, or figure/table legends) and three elements to summarize results in the form of any combination of figures and/or tables.

Coral Reef Papers. Articles describing novel research, with the topic or theme related to coral reef ecosystems. There are no length limits, though article length should be justified by the content.

New Taxa Papers. Articles that include the description of new taxa. Though there are no official limits, length should be justified by the content.

Portraits of Marine Science. Articles describing novel research or scientific observations featuring stand-alone imagery with an extended legend describing the artwork/photographs. The final product must fit on two BMS pages (approximately 800 words all-inclusive). The text of the Portrait serves as the legend, there is no additional legend; and the number of references should be limited. The inclusion of non-photograph imagery (maps, graphs, etc.) is highly discouraged for this submission type.

Research Tools in Marine Science. Articles describing a novel research gear, instrument, device, system, or software/package. These methods papers should demonstrate how the novel tool can advance marine research. For more information, see this editorial.


Formatting Requirements

Table of Contents:

Letter to the editor
Manuscript content
Title page
Abstract
Text
Acknowledgments
Literature Cited
Tables
Figures
Publication fees and open access

Quick Manuscript Checklist for Initial Submission
► Did you include a cover letter with the required information?
► Are your manuscript items in the correct order?
► Have you added page numbers and line numbers to your manuscript text?
► Is all text in the manuscript double-spaced, 12-point font?
► Are your references in the correct format?
► Are all figures, tables, and references properly cited in the text (and vice versa)?
► Have you reviewed the publication fee details for publishing at BMS?

Language:

Only mansucripts in American English are accepted. Spelling, word division, and geographical names should follow either the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English or The Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary.

Letter to the Editor:

As part of the electronic submission of manuscripts, authors are required to write a letter to the editor detailing the content of the manuscript and its appropriateness for the Bulletin of Marine Science, as well as any other information that the authors wish for the editor to consider. If the submission is intended to be considered for inclusion in a special issue, please identify that here. Authors can also identify an editor from the Bulletin's editorial board to handle their submission.

Content:

To facilitate initial review of a manuscript, authors may upload a Microsoft Word® file with embedded tables and figures (please note the sequence of the manuscript items below). Should a manuscript be invited for revision or be accepted, final versions of the tables and figures will be required.

Please add page numbers and line numbers to the manuscript document prior to submission.

Authors are strongly advised to consult a recent issue of the Bulletin and follow the style and general layout of articles. All manuscripts should be typed in 12-point typeface and double-spaced.

The sequence of the material should be:

Title Page:

The full title of the manuscript in 20 words or fewer. If applicable, the geographical location of the research should be referenced along with the full name of any particular focal species (authority credited with naming the species usually should not appear as part of the title).

A running title (eight word limit).

Authors’ names directly under the title.

Full addresses should be listed below the author name(s) using numerical superscripts. Indicate corresponding author with an asterisk (*).

Email address(es) for the corresponding author should be set inside angle brackets: <bms.editorial@miami.edu>.

Abstract:

Single paragraph (double spaced) of not more than 250 words. “Portrait of Marine Science” abstracts should not exceed 50 words. Please include abstract for all articles types.

Briefly states the reason for the research and summarizes the significant findings.

Scientific (binomial) names should be written in their entirety at first mention; i.e., Palythoa caribaeorum. Thereafter in the abstract, it is only necessary to abbreviate the species name (i.e., P. caribbaeorum) except when the species name starts a sentence in which case the genus must be spelled out in full (i.e., Palythoa caribaeorum). For manuscripts on the topic of new taxa or taxonomy, the authority credited with naming the species should be included (i.e., Palythoa caribaeorum (Duchassaing and Michelotti, 1860); this is optional for all other manuscript types.

A second-language abstract is accepted for publication but it is not mandatory. This is particularly relevant to research that has been conducted in a nation whose official language is not English and the inclusion of this non-English abstract is intended to widen the readership of the article and its findings. Since the Bulletin is not staffed to edit or proof abstracts in languages other than English, it is the responsibility of the authors to make sure the text of the second abstract matches the content of the English abstract.

Text:

Cite all tables and figures in the order in which they are numbered.

Do not abbreviate state, province, or country names.

All scientific (binomial) names written in the text of the manuscript may optionally include the authority credited with naming the species at first mention only. However, if the manuscript topic is on new taxa or taxonomy, the authorities must be included. Throughout the remaining text, it is only necessary to abbreviate the species name (i.e., P. caribaeorum). An exception is when the species name starts a sentence in which case genus must be spelled out in full (i.e., Palythoa caribaeorum).

If there are more than 15 species listed in the manuscript, an alternative is to list species authorities (and common names if applicable) in a table or appendix.

Works in progress (i.e., manuscripts in preparation or review) cannot be cited in the text, and should instead be cited as unpublished data: (J Smith, University of Miami, unpubl data). Works in press may be cited as such in the text and in the Literature Cited as (Smith in press). When referencing unpublished data or a personal communication, include the name and institution of the person being referenced (i.e., J Smith, University of Miami, pers comm).

Common abbreviations and symbols such as %, mm, m, g, ml, mg, ºC, µm, d (day), hr (hour), yr (year), and so forth, should be used. Measurements are to be given in metric units only. Other equivalents may be given in parentheses if necessary. Abbreviate units of measure only when used with numbers (i.e., 45 cm, 14 mg, 30 d, etc.).

Boldfaced type should only be used when noting a new species. Otherwise, the use of boldfaced, scripted, and underlined text is discouraged.

All first and second headings (i.e., Methods, Results, Discussion) should be in small caps. All third headings should be set in italics.

All text should be aligned to the left. Do not double space after each sentence. Do not use tools such as “Track Changes,” and also refrain from inserting text boxes, headers, footers, and any other formatting devices.

Superscripts and subscripts should be used when necessary (i.e., cm2 or CO2).

Numbers one through nine should be spelled out when not associated with units of measure. Thereafter, use number keys (10, 11, 12, etc.).

Place in-text references within parentheses, follow the last name of the author(s) by the year of publication without intervening punctuation.

(Smith 2010)

(Smith and Jones 2005)

(Smith et al. 1996)

When referencing literature within the text of the manuscript use chronological order (i.e., Jones et al. 1979, Smith 1980, Reilly 1981). If years are the same organize alphabetically (i.e., Jones et al. 1979, McManus 1980, Smith et al. 1980). Literature cited within the text must be cited in the Literature Cited section and vice versa.

Acknowledgments:

Individuals should be acknowledged using their first initial and last name (i.e., J Smith).

Include a brief statement recognizing funding agencies, institutions, reviewers, permits, and any contributors to the work not listed in the authorship byline.

Literature Cited:

The Bulletin of Marine Science uses the Council of Science Editors Scientific Style and Format (8th ed) style (name-year system) for its Literature Cited section. Legal references in text should follow the Bluebook style.

Please refer to a recent issue of the Bulletin of Marine Science (starting with volume 87, older volumes used a different style) or to the Council of Science Editors Scientific Style and Format (8th ed) for guidance on citing literature according to Bulletin standards.

All literature referenced in the text must be included in the Literature Cited section and vice versa.

Authors are responsible for the completion and accuracy of the Literature Cited.

When citing an article, the Author(s). Date. Article title. Journal title. Volume(issue, if present in the document):location. should be included; i.e., Goddard JHR, Love MS. 2010. Megabenthic invertebrates on shell mounds associated with oil and gas platforms off California. Bull Mar Sci. 86(3):533–554. https://doi.org/10.5343/bms.2011.1090

All periodical names should be abbreviated. Journal abbreviations should be according to the Council of Science Editors Style Committee’s CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers, 8th edition. All that JAS: Journal Abbreviation Sources may also be used.

When citing a book, the Author(s)/Editor(s). Date. Title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher. should be included; i.e., Smith J. 1997. Birds of Florida. 2nd ed. New York: Murphy Publishing.

When citing a specific article or chapter within a book, the format is as follows: Author(s). Date. Article title. In: Editor(s)’ name(s), editors. Book title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher. Location.

McDaniel TK, Valdivia RH. 2005. New tools for virulence gene discovery. In: Cossart P, Boquet P, Normark S, Rappuoli R, editors. Cellular microbiology. 2nd ed. Washington DC: ASM Press. p. 473–488.

Literature cited should be in alphabetical order. When multiple works are cited by the same author, chronological order (in ascending order) is followed. When the first author is the same but coauthors differ, order the citations alphabetically, then alphabetically by the second authors’ surname. An example is as follows:

Smith A. 1987.

Smith A. 2001.

Smith A, Jones B. 2004.

Smith A, Jones B, Carson C. 2000.

Smith A, Martin G. 2001.

In the Literature Cited, capitalize only proper nouns, and special names of countries or regions of countries, cities or sections of cities, rivers, bays, oceans, mountains, islands, and other geographical names. Do not capitalize or italicize the titles of books, reference volumes, etc. Do not use ampersands (“&”) in citations unless it is part of a title or publishing house name.

Please keep citation of non peer-reviewed material (“gray literature”) to a minimum.

If multiple authors, spell out the first 10, then follow by “et al.” Example:

Maragos J, Miller J, Gove J, DeMartini E, Friedlander A, Godwin S, Musburger C, Timmers M, Tsuda R, Vroom P, et al. 2008.

We strongly encourage limiting the number of references to a ratio of 1:4 (about one page of citations for every four pages of text).

When a digital object identifier (DOI) name is displayed in a reference, it should be preceded with the URL form “https://doi.org/”. For example, the DOI name 10.5343/bms.2011.1090 would appear as https://doi.org/10.5343/bms.2011.1090. Note that there is no period at the end of the DOI in a citation. The DOI name should always be the last element in the citation. The Bulletin is a member of CrossRef, therefore, we require the use of DOIs in citations.

Users of EndNote® please download the output style “CSE Style Manual, 8th ed. (Name-Year)” from the EndNote website.

Electronic and Internet sources:

For a complete list of all types of electronic citations please refer to the Citing Medicine: The NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors, and Publishers [Internet]. 2nd edition (2007) available online at www.nlm.nih.gov/pubs/formats/internet.pdf.

Electronic-journal articles:

Last Name and Initial(s) of Author, [followed by last names and initials of other authors]. Year of Publication. Title of article. Abbreviated Journal Title [medium]; Volume: Inclusive Page Numbers [if available]. Availability Information. Date of Access.

Dahlgren C, Marr J. 2004. Back reef systems: important but overlooked components of tropical marine systems. Bull Mar Sci. [serial online] 75(2):145–152. Available from: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/umrsmas/bullmar/2004/00000075/00000002/art00002 via the Internet. Accessed 14 March, 2005.

Electronic books or monographs:

Last Name and Initial(s) of Author, [followed by last names and initials of other authors]. Year of Publication. Title of monograph [monograph online]. Place of Publication: Publisher; [Update Information, if applicable]. Availability Information. Date of Access.

Databases:

Last Name and Initial(s) of Author, [followed by last names and initials of other authors, if any]. Title of Database. Version. Place of Publication: Publisher. Date of Publication [Date of Update/Revision; Date of Citation].

Entire web pages:

Last Name and Initial(s) of Author; Title of Webpage [Internet]. Place of Publication: Publisher; Date of Publication [Date of Update/Revision, Date of Copyright, Date of Citation]. Available from: (Insert URL)

Bulletin of Marine Science [Internet]. Miami, FL: Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric & Earth Science, University of Miami; c2017, 14 March, 2017. Available from: http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/bms (or rsmas.miami.edu/bms)

Discussion lists:

Author of Message. Title of Message. In: Title of List. [Place of Publication: Publisher]; Date of Publication; [cited (insert citation date)]. Numeration of Message. Available from: Insert URL

Blogs:

Author of Blog. Title of Blog. Type of Medium [Internet]. Place of Publication: Publisher; Date of Publication - [cited (insert citation date)]. Available from: Insert URL

Table and Figure Formatting (for final version submission to BMS after acceptance)

Figures and tables, with their legends and headings, should be self-explanatory and should not require reference to the text. Species names should not be abbreviated in either figure or table legends.

Figures should be clear and legible, with 1-inch margins. The dimensions and the thickness of the individual lines, spaces, and letters may also be reduced proportionally.

Each table and figure should start on a separate page. Consistency in headings and format is desirable. Vertical rules or horizontal gridlines should be avoided.

Tables:

Only Excel® spreadsheets and Word® tables are accepted. When using Word, insert a table by using the “Table” menu. Do not use tabs or spaces to separate columns. Do not submit tables as image files. Do not add extra spaces in rows within or between table columns. Spaces prevent proper column alignment and require reformatting during typesetting. Do not break up tables as continuation pages (i.e., Table 1 continued).

If a table is large, and consists of numerous pages, the number of columns must be the same for all rows even if cells are blank.

There should be no shading, boldfacing, underlining, or box-line formatting in tables.

Brief table legends should be included immediately above each table.

Figures:

Bulletin of Marine Science accepts EPS, TIFF, JPG, and high resolution PDF images only (consider using the predefined “Press Quality” Adobe PDF preset in Acrobat’s “File” menu. This preset contains flattener settings appropriate for complex figures intended for high-resolution output).

Please make sure each figure is properly labeled before submission (Figure 1, Figure 2, etc.).

The resolution for final figures must be 360 dpi.

Size your images: 29 picas (12.28 cm, 4.833 inches) maximum width for portrait images, 42 picas (17.78 cm, 7 inches) maximum width for landscape images.

All lines must be at least 0.5 point. Avoid the use of very small print, fine lines (hairlines) or very light stippling — these fade or disappear during final printing, or in the case of text, become unreadable.

Remove gridlines from all figures.

If a figure has shading or texture, it should be saved as a TIFF file to insure the patterns and shading are maintained.

If a figure is divided into parts, denote the figure panels/sections with capital-case letters (A, B, C, etc.). All tables and figures pertaining to a manuscript published in the Bulletin appear in text with capital letters as Fig. 1A, Figure 2C, etc. (not Fig. 1a, Fig. 2c).

Choose fonts for their readability (Helvetica, Times, Arial are good examples). Font size should not be less than 8 point in the final layout size.

Figures with errors will either be returned or printed with the errors. The Bulletin does not redraw or modify figures. Please proof carefully.

Figure legends must not be included on the figure. All figure legends should be included separately, in the text following the Literature Cited and tables.

Important! Avoid these common errors when submitting your figures:

  1. Format: Bulletin of Marine Science accepts EPS, TIFF, JPG, and high resolution PDF images only (consider using the predefined “Press Quality” Adobe PDF preset. This preset contains flattener settings appropriate for complex figures intended for high-resolution output). Refrain from submitting electronic images in Word or any other word processing application.
  2. Resolution and size: The resolution must be 360 dpi. At this resolution all figures must be sized to fit within the printed page dimensions of 19.4 × 12.5 cm.
  3. Use of fine lines and/or small print: All lines must be at least 0.5 point. Avoid the use of very small print, fine lines (hairlines) or very light stippling — these fade or disappear during final printing, or in the case of text, become unreadable.

“FastTrack” Publication:

The Bulletin of Marine Science is dedicated to ensuring authors' research is available as soon as possible. As part of our service to authors, we will host a version of accepted manuscripts (as submitted) on the "FastTrack" section of BMS Online. When the final article is available (following the galley proof process, see below), this FastTrack article will be removed and the final version will replace it. The date the article was first made available online will be carried over, but the year of publication will correspond to the volume/issue of inclusion.

Proofs:

After posting the manuscript in FastTrack, the text will be copy-edited and typeset for publication, and a PDF galley will be sent to the author via email for final proof reading and approval. After the galley proof is returned to BMS, this final version will replace the early accepted (but unedited) version of the paper. Please check your proofs carefully. The author will be responsible for any errors that appear in the final printed version.

Formatting questions?

Contact the Managing Editor, Rafael J Araújo, at <raraujo@miami.edu>.


Publication Fees and Open Access

Author publication fees:

The Bulletin of Marine Science has no author publication fees (Green Open Access). For Open Access, please consult the next section.

Open Access:

The Bulletin of Marine Science is a hybrid open access journal, offering two open access options: Green Open Access (an article processing fee of $100 will be invoiced if manuscript is accepted for publication), and Gold Open Access ($1300, which includes the article processing fee). Gold Open Access articles are immediately available online for everyone to freely download and share. Green Open Access articles are freely available after a 5 year embargo period (before which they are available to journal subscribers). Authors of accepted articles will be given the choice between selecting Green Open Access or Gold Open Access.


Green Open Access Gold Open Access
Author PDF Receive a free PDF of your article Download
Open access Becomes open access 
5 years following publication
Becomes open access
upon publication
Fee Article processing fee $100 $1300

 

Article sharing policies:

Accepted articles published by the Bulletin of Marine Science may be shared via personal or institutional repositories. The terms for sharing articles depends on whether the article is Green Open Access or Gold Open Access. In all cases, the Bulletin of Marine Science encourages the sharing of an article DOI over full-text hosting. Please note that ResearchGate and Sci-Hub are not considered institutions. For more information on responsible article sharing, please visit the Coalition for Responsible Sharing.

Green Open Access

Authors who select Green Open Access may share a link (such as the article DOI) to their article on any digital platform. Green Open Access articles may also be uploaded to institutional repositories for internal institutional use. Articles classified as Green are automatically transitioned to Gold after a five (5) year embargo period, during which they are accessible via an institutional subscription. These article may also be shared directly with interested students or research collaborators for personal use only.
Gold Open Access
Authors who select Gold Open Access may share a link to their article on any digital platform. Gold Open Access articles may also be shared on non-commercial hosting platforms such as personal repositories or academic institution (e.g., university) repositories. These articles may also be shared directly with interested students or research collaborators for personal use only.


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