bulletin ofentomological research notes for authors

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NOTES FOR AUTHORS Please see the complete version (“Instructions for Contributors”) at journals.cambridge.org/ber Styles of Paper Bulletin of Entomological Research publishes two types of paper: • Full research papers • Reviews If the referees and editors judge a paper to be particularly significant then it will be fast-tracked for publication. We also welcome ‘Letters to the Editor’ with comments on recently published papers. Manuscript Preparation Language Manuscripts should be in English. Manuscript content Manuscripts should be prepared in Microsoft Word or similar according to the following structure: • The text, divided under appropriate headings. Clearly differentiate between primary (bold, large font size), secondary (bold, text font size) and tertiary (italics) headings • Acknowledgements (if any) • References (for further information about presenting references please see below) • Tables, either at the end of the manuscript or as separate files. Tables should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals and every table should be mentioned at least once in the text. • Illustrations should be submitted as separate files in TIF or EPS format but captions should be listed at the end of the manuscript text. Abstract Each paper must commence with an accurate, informative abstract. It should not exceed 250 words. A short title should also be provided for use as a running head. References References must be based on the name and year system, give full journal titles and conform to the following styles: Journal paper: Thiery, D., Monceau, K. & Moreau, J. (2014) Larval intraspecific competition for food in the European grapevine moth Lobesia botrana. Bulletin of Entomological Research 104, 517–524. Whole book: Krantz, G.W. & Walter, D.E. (2009) A Manual of Acarology. Texas, Texas Tech University Press. Chapter in book: Jervis, M.A. & Heimpel, G.E. (2005) Phytophagy. pp 525–550 in Jervis, M.A. (Ed.) Insect Natural Enemies: A Practical Perspective. Dordrecht, The Netherlands, Springer. Proceedings: Virgilio, M., Backeljau, T. & DeMeyer, M. (2007) Incongruence of phylogenetic signals and shared polymorphisms prevent the molecular characterization of the Ceratitis fasciventris, C. anonae, C. rosa complex (Diptera: Tephritidae). p. 520 in Proceedings of the 11th Congress of the European Society for Evolutionary Biology, Upsalla, Sweden. Please list papers by more than two authors, but with the same first author, by year sequence and alphabetically within each year. Citation of authors in the text should appear in the form: Thiery (2014) or (Thiery, 2014). Authors should be cited in chronological order as: (Jervis et al., 2005; Krantz & Walter, 2009). Tables Tables should be in a simple form and should not be used if text or illustrations give the same information. They can either be submitted as separate files (Microsoft Word or Excel) or embedded within the main manuscript file. Each table must have a clear and concise caption. Illustrations  Illustrations should be submitted in TIF or EPS format at approximate final publication size. Resolution of artwork should be at the following minimum resolutions: Line artwork (black & white), 1200dpi; Combination, i.e. line/tone (greyscale), 800dpi; Black & White halftone (greyscale), 300dpi; and Colour halftone, 300dpi. Comprehensive guidance on creating suitable electronic figures is available at http://dx.sheridan.com/guidelines/digital_ art.html where you will find extensive guidelines on preparing electronic figures. An online preflighting tool (http://dx.sheridan. com/index.html) is also available where you can check if your figures are suitable for reproduction. Captions should be listed at the end of the manuscript text. Supplementary Material Additional information which due to its nature does not lend itself to print media (examples- full data sets, movie or sounds files etc…) may be submitted for online-only publication. Please see full details (“Instructions for Contributors”) at journals.cambridge. org/ber. Technical and Nomenclature Standards All work should use SI units as standard. Anatomical terms can be a mixture of the English vernacular and Latin, depending on current usage. Manuscript Preparation We kindly ask that you follow the instructions below when preparing your manuscript for submission. This will minimize the risk of errors being introduced during the publishing process. • Use double-line spacing and ample margins (at least 2.5cm) on each side. • Do not underline anything • Number each line consecutively across the pages of the manuscript, rather than within pages • Number every page (preferably the top right corner) • Do not indent the start of each paragraph • Use italics for taxonomic nomenclature and bold for headings • Use standard abbreviations (e.g. Fig. and Figs) and SI units • Use British rather than American Spellings and ‘z’ rather than ‘s’ spellings in words with ‘ize’. Voucher specimens The deposition of voucher specimens should be considered where appropriate. Manuscript Submission All manuscripts should be submitted via our on-line system, Editorial Manager, at http://www.editorialmanager.com/ber. New users will need to register first. Peer review Communications for peer review will be by email as far as possible. Authors are invited to suggest the names and contact details of at least two potential referees and are asked to provide keywords indicating the content of the manuscript. Please also give a brief description (no more than 50 words) of why the manuscript is an important contribution to entomology research. Publication Copyright Authors will be supplied with an agreement to publish form, which must be completed and returned to the Publisher. Papers are accepted on the understanding that the work has been submitted exclusively to the Bulletin and has not been previously published elsewhere. Proofs Authors will receive a PDF file of page proofs by email, and will be asked to return corrected proofs within 72 hours. Offprints  The author (or main author) of an accepted paper will receive a free PDF of their paper. Paper offprints are available for a fee and should be ordered at proof stage. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485317000785 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core, IP address: 65.21.228.167, on subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms.

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Page 1: Bulletin ofEntomological Research NOTES FOR AUTHORS

Bulletin of Entomological Researchjournals.cambridge.org/ber

Aims and ScopeEstablished in 1910, the internationally recognised Bulletin of Entomological Research aims to further globalknowledge of entomology through the generalisation of research findings rather than providing moreentomological exceptions. The Bulletin publishes high quality and original research papers, 'critiques' and reviewarticles concerning insects or other arthropods of economic importance in agriculture, forestry, stored products,biological control, medicine, animal health and natural resource management. The scope of papers addresses thebiology, ecology, behaviour, physiology and systematics of individuals and populations, with a particularemphasis upon the major current and emerging pests of agriculture, horticulture and forestry, and vectors ofhuman and animal diseases. This includes the interactions between species (plants, hosts for parasites, naturalenemies and whole communities), novel methodological developments, including molecular biology, in anapplied context. The Bulletin does not publish the results of pesticide testing or traditional taxonomic revisions.

Bulletin of Entomological Research is published bimonthly by Cambridge University Press

Editor-in-ChiefDr Paul De Barro

CSIRO Health & Biosecurity, Brisbane, Queensland 4001, Australia

Email: [email protected]

Subject Editors

NOTES FOR AUTHORS

Please see the complete version (“Instructions for Contributors”) at journals.cambridge.org/ber

Styles of PaperBulletin of Entomological Research publishes two types of paper:• Full research papers• Reviews If the referees and editors judge a paper to be particularlysignificant then it will be fast-tracked for publication.We also welcome ‘Letters to the Editor’ with comments on recentlypublished papers.

Manuscript PreparationLanguageManuscripts should be in English.Manuscript content Manuscripts should be prepared in Microsoft Word or similaraccording to the following structure:• The text, divided under appropriate headings. Clearly

differentiate between primary (bold, large font size), secondary(bold, text font size) and tertiary (italics) headings

• Acknowledgements (if any) • References (for further information about presenting references

please see below)• Tables, either at the end of the manuscript or as separate files.

Tables should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numeralsand every table should be mentioned at least once in the text.

• Illustrations should be submitted as separate files in TIF or EPS format but captions should be listed at the end of themanuscript text.

AbstractEach paper must commence with an accurate, informativeabstract. It should not exceed 250 words. A short title should alsobe provided for use as a running head.

ReferencesReferences must be based on the name and year system, give fulljournal titles and conform to the following styles:Journal paper:Thiery, D., Monceau, K. & Moreau, J. (2014) Larval intraspecific

competition for food in the European grapevine moth Lobesiabotrana. Bulletin of Entomological Research 104, 517–524.

Whole book:Krantz, G.W. & Walter, D.E. (2009) A Manual of Acarology. Texas,

Texas Tech University Press.Chapter in book:Jervis, M.A. & Heimpel, G.E. (2005) Phytophagy. pp 525–550 in

Jervis, M.A. (Ed.) Insect Natural Enemies: A PracticalPerspective. Dordrecht, The Netherlands, Springer.

Proceedings:Virgilio, M., Backeljau, T. & DeMeyer, M. (2007) Incongruence of

phylogenetic signals and shared polymorphisms prevent themolecular characterization of the Ceratitis fasciventris, C.anonae, C. rosa complex (Diptera: Tephritidae). p. 520 inProceedings of the 11th Congress of the European Society forEvolutionary Biology, Upsalla, Sweden.

Please list papers by more than two authors, but with the same firstauthor, by year sequence and alphabetically within each year.Citation of authors in the text should appear in the form: Thiery(2014) or (Thiery, 2014). Authors should be cited in chronologicalorder as: (Jervis et al., 2005; Krantz & Walter, 2009).

TablesTables should be in a simple form and should not be used if text orillustrations give the same information. They can either be submitted asseparate files (Microsoft Word or Excel) or embedded within the mainmanuscript file. Each table must have a clear and concise caption.

Illustrations Illustrations should be submitted in TIF or EPS format atapproximate final publication size. Resolution of artwork should

be at the following minimum resolutions: Line artwork (black &white), 1200dpi; Combination, i.e. line/tone (greyscale), 800dpi;Black & White halftone (greyscale), 300dpi; and Colour halftone,300dpi. Comprehensive guidance on creating suitable electronicfigures is available at http://dx.sheridan.com/guidelines/digital_art.html where you will find extensive guidelines on preparingelectronic figures. An online preflighting tool (http://dx.sheridan.com/index.html) is also available where you can check if yourfigures are suitable for reproduction. Captions should be listed atthe end of the manuscript text.

Supplementary MaterialAdditional information which due to its nature does not lend itselfto print media (examples- full data sets, movie or sounds filesetc…) may be submitted for online-only publication. Please seefull details (“Instructions for Contributors”) at journals.cambridge.org/ber.

Technical and Nomenclature StandardsAll work should use SI units as standard. Anatomical terms can bea mixture of the English vernacular and Latin, depending oncurrent usage.

Manuscript PreparationWe kindly ask that you follow the instructions below whenpreparing your manuscript for submission. This will minimizethe risk of errors being introduced during the publishing process.

• Use double-line spacing and ample margins (at least 2.5cm) oneach side.

• Do not underline anything• Number each line consecutively across the pages of the

manuscript, rather than within pages• Number every page (preferably the top right corner) • Do not indent the start of each paragraph• Use italics for taxonomic nomenclature and bold for headings• Use standard abbreviations (e.g. Fig. and Figs) and SI units• Use British rather than American Spellings and ‘z’ rather than

‘s’ spellings in words with ‘ize’.

Voucher specimensThe deposition of voucher specimens should be considered whereappropriate.

Manuscript SubmissionAll manuscripts should be submitted via our on-line system,Editorial Manager, at http://www.editorialmanager.com/ber.New users will need to register first.

Peer reviewCommunications for peer review will be by email as far aspossible. Authors are invited to suggest the names and contactdetails of at least two potential referees and are asked to providekeywords indicating the content of the manuscript. Please alsogive a brief description (no more than 50 words) of why themanuscript is an important contribution to entomology research.

Publication

CopyrightAuthors will be supplied with an agreement to publish form,which must be completed and returned to the Publisher. Papersare accepted on the understanding that the work has beensubmitted exclusively to the Bulletin and has not been previouslypublished elsewhere.

ProofsAuthors will receive a PDF file of page proofs by email, and willbe asked to return corrected proofs within 72 hours.

Offprints The author (or main author) of an accepted paper will receive afree PDF of their paper. Paper offprints are available for a fee andshould be ordered at proof stage.

Dr N. Agusti, IRTA, SpainDr T. Backeljau, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural

Sciences, BelgiumDr S. Baxter, University of Adelaide, AustraliaDr L. Boykin, University of Western Australia, AustraliaProfessor M. Chen, Northwest A&F University, China Dr Chen Xue-Xin, Zhejiang University, ChinaDr P. Cunningham, Queensland University of

Technology, AustraliaDr S. Downes, CSIRO, Ecosystem Sciences, AustraliaDr R. Garrick, University of Mississippi, USADr E. Gray, Colorado College, USA Dr S. Hayward, University of Birmingham, UKDr A. K-W. Hee, Universiti Putra Malaysia, MalaysiaDr H. Hesketh, Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, UKDr B. Hoffmann, CSIRO, Ecosystem Sciences, AustraliaProfessor M. Isman, University of British Columbia,

CanadaDr T.H. Jones, Cardiff University, UKDr A. Kapranas, Maynooth University, IrelandDr D. Kriticos, CSIRO Black Mountain Labs,

Australian Capital Territory, AustraliaDr O. Kwon, Kyungpook National University, KoreaDr B. Lavandero, Universidad de Talca, Talca, ChileProfessor C-Y. Lee, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia Professor S. Li, Shanghai Institutes for Biological

Sciences, China Professor Y. Lu, Chinese Academy of Agricultural

Sciences, China

Dr S. Macfayden, CSIRO, Ecosystem Sciences, AustraliaDr N. V. Meyling, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkProfessor B. Nault, Cornell University, USADr D. Perez-Staples, INBIOTECA, Universidad

Veracruzana, MexicoDr C. Robin, University of Melbourne, AustraliaDr E. Roditakis, National Agricultural Research

Foundation, GreeceDr Zhentao Sheng, University of Chicago, USAProfessor P. Stevenson, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UKProfessor J-H. Sun, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Dr W.T. Tay, CSIRO Black Mountain Labs, Australian

Capital Territory, AustraliaDr L. Thomson, University of Melbourne, AustraliaProfessor P. Trematerra, University of Molise, ItalyDr M. Virgilio, Royal Museum for Central Africa,

Belgium Dr K. Wallin, University of Vermont, USADr T. Walsh, CSIRO Health & Biosecurity, AustraliaDr X.-W. Wang, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou,

ChinaDr S. L. Wee, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia,

MalaysiaDr A. Wilby, Lancaster University, UKProfessor L. Winder, UNITEC, Auckland, New ZealandDr. X.-Y. Hong, Department of Plant Protection,

Nanjing Agricultural University, NanjingDr M. Yazdani, University of Adelaide, AustraliaProfessor W. Zhang, Sun Yat-sen University, China

© Cambridge University Press 2017.

This journal issue has been printed on FSCTM-certified paper and cover board. FSC is an independent, non-governmental, not- for-profit organization established to promote the responsible management of the world’s forests. Please see www.fsc.org

for information.

Cover image: Coccinellid predation of Aphis nerii.

Photo taken by: Paul de Barro.

00074853_107-5_00074853_107-5 26/09/17 4:56 PM Page 2

https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485317000785Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core, IP address: 65.21.228.167, on subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms.

Page 2: Bulletin ofEntomological Research NOTES FOR AUTHORS

Bulletin of

EntomologicalResearch

Cambridge CoreFor further information about this journal please go to the journal website at:cambridge.org/ber

MIXPaper from

responsible sources®

®

Research Papers

K.W. Bähner, K.A. Zweig, I.R. Leal and R. WirthRobustness of plant–insect herbivore interaction networks to climate change in a fragmented temperate forest landscape 563

B. Ammagarahalli, L. Chianella, P. Gomes and C. GemenoRole of plant volatiles and hetero-specific pheromone components in the wind tunnel response of maleGrapholita molesta (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) to modified sex pheromone blends 573

S. Rocha, C. Kerdelhué, M.L. Ben Jamaa, S. Dhahri, C. Burban and M. BrancoEffect of heat waves on embryo mortality in the pine processionary moth 583

J. Jackowski, J. Popłon ́ski, K. Twardowska, J. Magiera-Dulewicz, M. Hurej and E. HuszczaDeterrent activity of hops flavonoids and their derivatives against stored product pests 592

S.H. Nikookar, M. Fazeli-Dinan, S. Azari-Hamidian, S.N. Mousavinasab, M. Arabi, S.P. Ziapour, J. Shojaee and A. EnayatiSpecies composition and abundance of mosquito larvae in relation with their habitat characteristics in Mazandaran Province, northern Iran 598

O. Baruch, Z. Mendel, I. Scharf and A.R HarariMating system, mate choice and parental care in a bark beetle 611

H.M. Yu, B.J. Zhu, Y. Sun, G.Q. Wei, L. Wang, C. Qian, M. Nadeem Abbas and C.L. LiuCharacterization and functional analysis of serpin-1 like gene from oak silkworm Antheraea pernyi 620

C.M. Oliveira, C.N. Silva, M.R. Frizzas and A.C. DianeseMeasuring population fluctuation of jatropha stem-borer [Cophes notaticeps (Marshall)] in the Brazilian Cerradousing a new trap 627

R.D. Coutinho-Silva, M.A. Montes, G.F. Oliveira, F.G. de Carvalho-Neto, C. Rohde and A.C.L. GarciaEffects of seasonality on drosophilids (Insecta, Diptera) in the northern part of the Atlantic Forest, Brazil 634

F.D. Kirst, L. Marinoni and R.F. KrügerWhat does the Southern Brazilian Coastal Plain tell about its diversity? Syrphidae (Diptera) as a model 645

M. Plascencia and S.M. PhilpottFloral abundance, richness, and spatial distribution drive urban garden bee communities 658

J.M. Pueyrredon, J.E. Crespo and M.K. CasteloFunctional sensorial complementation during host orientation in an Asilidae parasitoid larva 668

P. Mishra, A.P.B Balaji, P.K. Dhal, R.S. Suresh Kumar, S. Magdassi, K. Margulis, B.K Tyagi, A. Mukherjee and N. ChandrasekaranStability of nano-sized permethrin in its colloidal state and its effect on the physiological and biochemical profile of Culex tritaeniorhynchus larvae 676

A. Golizadeh and Z. AbediFeeding performance and life table parameters of Khapra Beetle, Trogoderma granarium Everts (Coleoptera: Dermestidae) on various barley cultivars 689

K. Motley, N.P. Havill, A.L. Arsenault-Benoit, A.E. Mayfield, D.S. Ott, D. Ross, M.C. Whitmore and K.F. WallinFeeding by Leucopis argenticollis and Leucopis piniperda (Diptera: Chamaemyiidae) from the western USA on Adelges tsugae (Hemiptera: Adelgidae) in the eastern USA 699

Volume 107Issue 5

October 2017

Bulletin of

EntomologicalResearch

ISSN 0007-4853

Online submission at: www.editorialmanager.com/ber

Volume 107Issue 5

October 2017

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https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485317000785Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core, IP address: 65.21.228.167, on subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms.