Tropical Diversity (2019) 1(1): 1-4.
ISSN: 2596-2388.
EDITORIAL
© 2019 The Authors
1
Tropical Diversity
Edinaldo Nelson dos Santos Silva
1
, Veridiana Scudeller
2
, Mauro José Cavalcanti
3
1
Laboratório de Plâncton, Coordenação de Bidiversidade, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Av. André
Araújo, 2936, CEP 69060-000, Manaus, AM, Brazil. E-mail: nelson@inpa.gov.br
2
Laboratório de Botânica, Departamento de Biologia, Universidade Federal do Amazonas, Manaus, AM, Brazil. E-mail:
scudellerveridiana@hotmail.com
3
Ecoinformatics Studio, Caixa Postal 46521, CEP 20551-940, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. E-mail: maurobio@gmail.com
Introduction
The tropics have long fascinated
scientists, from both natural history and the social
sciences (Wallace, 1878; Dobzhansky, 1950;
Robinson, 1978; Janzen, 1986; Arnold, 2000).
Geographically located in a wide belt surrounding
the equator (Gritzner, 2007), the tropics
encompass all the large rain forests and coral
reefs, the most diverse and complex ecosystems in
the planet (Connell, 1978; Wilson, 1992).
Economically, the tropical regions are a rich
source of wood, products of pharmacological use,
rubber, and other raw materials crucial to industry
what has turned its exploitation into a highly
profitable activity, especially in the last hundred
years of colonial expansion (Kidd, 1898).
Increasing pressures on tropical natural
resources are rapidly modifying or destroying
pristine areas and causing the extinction of animal
and plant species, in some cases even before they
are known (Prance, 1977; Raven, 1977; Lees &
Pimm, 2015).
Therefore, vehicles for fast publication, at
its all multiple levels, are much needed to allow
the timely dissemination of information on
tropical diversity (Jarvie & van Welzen, 1994), if
there is any hope to conserve and use it in
sustainable ways. In this sense, we see as most
opportune the creation of a new, dynamic, fast-
tracking scientific journal using the current tools
of information technology to achieve this goal.
Focus and Scope
Tropical Diversity is an online, open and
free access multidisciplinary journal that
publishes original articles, scientific notes, and
reviews on all aspects of biological and
sociocultural diversity in the tropics, in English,
Portuguese, or Spanish. The scope includes all
fields of theoretical and applied terrestrial and
aquatic (marine and freshwater) ecology, biology,
management, conservation, and social, economic,
political, and cultural aspects.
Santos-Silva et al. (2019)
Editorial
© 2019 The Authors
2
Open Peer Review Process
Each manuscript will be sent to at least
two peer reviewers for evaluation. The authors
can suggest possible reviewers (with their
contacts) or request that others be excluded. The
journal adopts an open review procedure,
therefore both the authors and the reviewers are to
be made known to each other, as these potentially
have a positive impact upon the quality of the
reviews, the recommendation regarding
publication, the tone of the review and the time
spent on reviewing (Walsh et al., 2000). Upon
acceptance of a manuscript, the Editor in Chief
will send the comments and recommendations of
the referees to the authors, for reformulation as
needed.
Open Access Policy
The journal provides immediate open
access to its content on the principle that making
research freely available to the public supports a
greater global exchange of knowledge. All articles
are published online with Open Access and
distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution-Non-Comercial (CC BY-
NC) License.
Data Archiving
Because data are one of the most
important products of the scientific enterprise,
they should be preserved and usable for decades
in the future. The editors of Tropical Diversity
embrace an open access data policy and thus
requires, as a condition for publication, that all
data supporting the results in papers published in
this journal should be archived in appropriate
public archives, such as GenBank, Treebase,
Dryad, figshare, or any another archive of the
author's choice that provides comparable access
and guarantee of preservation. Authors may elect
to have the data made publicly available at time of
publication or, if the technology of the archive so
allows, they may opt to embargo access to the
data for a period of up to a year after publication.
Reproducible Research
The editors of Tropical Diversity are
committed to the concept of reproducible research
- the ability to recompute results of scientific
experiments and data analyses which is at the very
foundation of modern science (Gentleman, 2005;
Peng, 2011; Goodman et al., 2016). This involves
not only the scientific paper itself, but also the
data and computational environment used to
generate the reported results, so that they can be
reproduced and used as the basis to create new
work. In order to encourage the practice of
making research published in this journal
reproducible by others, authors are strongly
encouraged to: (i) to adopt, for all data analysis
and graphics, software tools which are themselves
conducive to reproducible research, as the R
(Ihaka & Gentleman, 1996) or Python (Oliphant,
2007) languages that have now become the lingua
franca for scientific computing; and (ii) to publish
all the source code used in their analysis in public
repositories as GitHub, Dryad, or figshare; these
can organized around R Markdown source
Santos-Silva et al. (2019)
Editorial
© 2019 The Authors
3
documents (Marwick et al., 2018) or Jupyter
notebooks (Kluyver et al., 2016). While
considering reproducibility to be a desirable goal,
the editors of Tropical Diversity emphasize that
the journal policy is to encourage authors to
consider this as an opportunity that they may wish
to take, rather than as a requirement that is
imposed upon them. All submissions to the
journal will continue to be reviewed using the
normal process; the issue of reproducibility will
be considered only when a paper had been
accepted for publication on the basis of its
scientific merit as judged by our peer-review
process.
Frequency
Tropical Diversity adopts a continuous
flow of publication (rolling pass) in one annual
volume with two issues per year. Articles will be
published shortly after acceptance and the final
corrections of the master proof have been made.
Publication Fees
In order to cover publication expenses
especially those involved in journal production
and online hosting and archiving Tropical
Diversity charges an Article Processing Charge
(APC) to authors for each article published. Such
publication fees are fixed and independent of
article page length, with no additional fees for
color figures or Supporting Information (SI).
Currently, authors are asked a fee of $100 BRL
per article.
In cases where authors do not have the
means to pay the publication fees, they can apply
for a waiver. Authors wishing to apply for a
waiver must do so at the point of submission.
Publication fees are payable upon article
acceptance. Authors’ ability to pay publication
fees will never be a consideration in the decision
whether to publish. Decisions to accept or reject
articles are made solely on the basis of merit, and
information about waiver applications are not
disclosed to the editors or reviewers.
References
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Connell, J. H. 1978. Diversity in tropical rain
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Dobzhansky, T. 1950. Evolution in the tropics.
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Gentleman, R. 2005. Reproducible research: a
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Goodman, S. N., Fanelli, D. & Ioannidis, J. P. A.
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Gritzner, C. F. 2007. The Tropics. New York:
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