International Journal of Geographical Information Science
5th Special Issue on Spatial Ecology
摘要截稿:
全文截稿: 2018-07-15
影响因子: 3.733
期刊难度:
CCF分类: C类
中科院JCR分区:
• 大类 : 地球科学 - 2区
• 小类 : 计算机:信息系统 - 2区
• 小类 : 地理学 - 2区
• 小类 : 自然地理 - 2区
• 小类 : 图书情报与档案管理 - 2区
Overview
A 5th special issue on spatial ecology has been approved by the Editors and Publisher of the International Journal of GIS. You are encouraged to submit relevant and high quality manuscripts for this special issue (see details below). This special issue continues the tradition of Spatial Ecology publications in the IJGIS.
Spatial Ecology in its broadest sense is the application of geospatial analyses to applications spanning fields such as ecology, forestry, agriculture, environmental management, geography, and global change. The previous special issues reflect the breadth, but also the depth, of spatial ecology.
The first four special issues on spatial ecology can be accessed from http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tgis20/25/3, http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tgis20/26/11, http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tgis20/28/8, and http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tgis20/30/1.
For this special issue, we are seeking the submission of papers from ecological and related environmental studies, as well as more technical articles including topics such as spatial data infrastructure relevant to ecological applications. We are especially interested in special and novel ways of addressing spatial ecology questions, managing spatial ecological data, and advancing open science in spatial ecology.
Key words and topics for this special issue include scale, geovisualization, spatial data infrastructure for ecological (biodiversity) data, methods to derive ancillary data required for ecological modeling (climate, terrain, soils etc), animal movement including both spatial and temporal analysis, phenology, global databases for ecological studies (biodiversity, NPP, carbon etc), fragmentation and connectivity, biodiversity hotspots and endemism, physical vegetation structure for biomass assessment, palaeoecology and reconstructing past environments with respect to climate change, innovative methods and models for spatial ecological analysis, and open science and new directions for spatial ecology research. Applications across terrestrial, marine and atmospheric ecology are welcome. Relevant cross-over papers between GIS and remote sensing will also be considered.