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Presubmission
Manuscript Reviews For Colleagues who do not have English as
a First Language |
English is the language of science communication and
of the SSAR. Ironically, though, most of the animals that we study come
from countries where English is not the first language. In order to
promote the publication of research on amphibians and reptiles from
those countries, the SSAR has started an editorial assistance program
for herpetologists who do not have English as their first language.
The following members of the SSAR community have offered to read and
edit up to three English language manuscripts per year within their
specific area of herpetological expertise. This is a free service provided
to herpetologists whose first language is not English, but who are striving
to publish their findings in peer reviewed English language journals.
If you would like to partake of this service, feel free to contact
by email any of the following people. Please, though, keep these points
in mind:
- Have a clear idea about where you want to submit your paper and
have worked hard to format your paper according to your selected journal's
"Direction for Authors."
- Tell the person you are approaching for editorial assistance a
bit about the focus of your paper and its size, before sending them
your manuscript.
- Provide that person the option of receiving your paper as either
hard copy by mail or as an electronic file appended to email. You
should similarly give him or her the choice of either emailing you
comments or mailing the marked up manuscript back to you.
- Allow the reviewer at least three weeks to get their comments back
to you.
- The people on this list may decline your invitation for a variety
of reasons; e.g., currently heavy teaching load, field work, high
number of manuscripts already edited during the year etc. Please accept
their declining to edit your paper on face value. Do not interpret
a refusal from anyone on this list as a disinterest in either you
or your work.
- The people who are volunteering to edit manuscripts are not formally
working for the SSAR and their assistance is no guarantee that your
paper will be accepted in the English language press.
| NAME |
EMAIL ADDRESS |
AREAS OF EXPERTISE |
| Adler, Kraig |
kka4@cornell.edu |
Herps of China, Orientation and Navigation |
| Aldridge, Robert D. |
aldridge@slu.edu |
Snake Reproduction |
| Andreadis, Paul |
nerodia@denison.edu |
Squamate Foraging Ecology, Reptile Ethology |
| Axtell, Ralph W. |
raxtell@siue.edu |
Lizard Systematics |
| Bauer, Aaron M. |
aaron.bauer@villanova.edu |
Lizard Systematics, Squamate Morphology, Biogeography |
| Beachy, Chris |
beachych@misu.nodak.edu |
Amphibian Life History, Amphibian Metamorphosis |
| Blackburn, David C. |
dblackb@fas.harvard.edu |
Amphibian Systematics and Evolution, African Herpetology |
| Bogart, Jim |
jbogart@uoguelph.ca |
Amphibian Evolution and Genetics |
| Buchanan, Bryant |
bbuchanan@utica.uscu.edu |
Evolutionary Ecology |
| Burton, Tom |
t.burton@latrobe.edu.au |
Frog Muscular Anatomy |
| Campbell, J. A. |
campbell@uta.edu |
Systematics, Neotropical Amphians & Reptiles, Biogeography |
| Crawford, Andrew J. |
crawfordaj@naos.si.edu |
Molecular Evolution Population Genetics (Eleutherodactylus) |
| Crumly, Chuck |
c.crumly@elsevier.com |
Tortoises & Chamaeleons |
| Cundall, David |
dlc0@lehigh.edu |
Snake Systematics/Functional Morphology |
| Dorcas, Mike |
midorcas@davidson.edu |
Reptilian Thermal Biology |
| Dowling, Herndon |
herndondowling@earthlink.net |
Snake Systematics |
| Duellman, William E. |
duellman@ku.edu |
Hylid Frog Systematics & Reproduction |
| Espinoza, Robert |
robert.e.espinoza@csun.edu |
Lizard Systematics & Ecology |
| Etheridge, Richard |
rether@sunstroke.sdsu.edu |
Lizard Systematics |
| Ford, Linda |
lford@amnh.org |
Dendrobatid Systematics, Curation & Collection management |
| Ford, Neil |
nford@mail.uttyl.edu |
Snake Behavior & Ecology |
| Forester, Don C. |
dforester@towson.edu |
Behavioral Ecology of Amphibians |
| Frost, Darrel |
frost@amnh.org |
Phylogenetics of Frogs, Philosophy of Science |
| Gluesenkamp, Andy |
agluesen@nhm.org |
Anuran Taxonomy/Systematics |
| Green, Tracy |
tg9aa@mizzou.edu |
Amphibian Terrestrial Habitat Use; Migration and Dispersal; Forest
Fragmentation; Radio-telemetry |
| Gregory, Patrick |
viper@uvic.ca |
Snake Ecology (feeding, thermoregulation, population ecology) |
| Hutchison, Victor H. |
vhutchison@ou.edu |
Thermal Biology |
| Irish, Fran |
kintae1@aol.com |
Snake Systematics/Functional Morphology |
| Iverson, John |
johni@earlham.edu |
Turtle ecology and systematics |
| Jaeger, Robert G. |
biology@louisiana.edu |
Amphibian Behavioral Ecology |
| Janzen, Fred |
fjanzen@iastate.edu |
Turtles, Life history, Sex determination, Evolution |
| Karns, Daryl R. |
karns@hanover.edu |
Snake Ecology |
| Kley, Nate |
kley@bio.umass.edu |
Squamate Morphology |
| Lee, Julian |
jlee@miami.edu |
Lizard Ecology, Biogeography |
| Lannoo, Michael J. |
mlannoo@gw.bsu.edu |
Amphibian Conservation, Sensory & Neural Biology |
| Lynch, John D. |
jlynch@ciencias.unal.edu.co |
Amphibian Systematics |
| Matter, John |
matter@juniata.edu |
Squamate Reproductive Anatomy/Seasonality |
| McCallum, Malcolm |
malcolm.mccallum@tamut.edu |
Amphibian & Reptile conservation, Immunology, Life history, Ecotoxicology,
Environmental Physiology, Behavior |
| McDiarmid, Roy |
mcdiarmid.roy@nmnh.si.edu |
Amphibian/Reptilian Systematics, ,Ecology, Larval Biology |
| Mitchell, Joseph C. |
jmitchel@richmond.edu |
Turtle and Snake ecology |
| Murphy, Jim |
jbmurphy2@juno.com |
Zoos and Aquarium Research on Behavior or Captive Management |
| Mushinsky, Henry |
mushinsk@chuma.cas.usf.edu |
Tortoise/Turtle Ecology |
| Nydam, Randall |
rnydam@midwestern.edu |
Reptile Paleontology |
| Perry, Gad |
gad.perry@ttu.edu |
Invasive Species Foraging behavior |
| Platenberg, Renata |
rplatenberg@usgs.gov |
Reptile Ecology & Behaviour |
| Preest, Marion |
mpreest@jsd.claremont.edu |
Physiological Ecology of Amphibians & Reptiles (osmoregulation,
energetics) |
| Price, Andy |
andy.price@tpwd.state.tx.us |
Ecology, conservation, Systematics |
| Pike, David |
dapike22@hotmail.com |
Turtle behavior, Reproduction, and Conservation |
| Richards, Christina |
crichar@biology.biosci.wayne.edu |
Tadpole Development Molecular Phylogeny of Anurans |
| Rivas, Jesus |
anaconda@prodigy.net |
Snake Behavior, Crocodiles, Iguanas |
| Savitsky, Alan |
asavitzk@odu.edu |
Snake Morphology & Development |
| Savitzky, Barbara |
bsavitz@cnu.edu |
Reptilian Ecology & Behavior |
| Sealy, John B. |
jsealy@boone.net |
Rattlesnake Ecology |
| Sever, David M. |
dsever@saintmarys.edu |
Anatomy of Reproduction |
| Shaffer, Brad |
hbshaffer@ucdavis.edu |
Molecular Systematics, Conservation Biology Salamanders & Turtles |
| Simmons, John |
jsimmons@ku.edu |
Curation/Collection Management |
| Summers, Adam |
asummers@uci.edu |
Biomechanics |
| Summers, Kyle |
summersk@mail.ecu.edu |
Neotropical Poison Frog Ecology and Evolution |
| Trauth, Stan |
strauth@astate.edu |
Ultrastructure of Sperm |
| Trueb, Linda |
trueb@ku.edu |
Amphibian Osteology |
| Vitt, Laurie |
vitt@ou.edu |
Lizard Ecology Will help with Brazilian ms. |
| Walls, Susan |
susan_walls@usgs.gov |
Amphibian Ecology (community-ecology) |
| Warkenten, Karen |
kwarken@bu.edu |
Phenotypic Plasticity & Behavioral Ecology of Tadpoles & Embryo
(amphibians) |
| Wassersug, Richard |
tadpole@is.dal.ca |
Tadpole Functional Morphology and Behavior |
| Wiens, John J. |
wiensj@carnegiemuseums.org |
Reptile and Amphibian Phylogenetics |
| Willson, J. D. |
willson@srel.edu |
Stream Salamander Conservation |
| Wise, Sharon |
swise@utica.ucsu.edu |
Behavioral Ecology |
| Wright, John W. |
wright@northlink.com |
Neotropical Reptile Systematics |
| Zug, George |
zug.george@nmnh.si.edu |
Skeletochronology, Asian Lizards & Turtles, Biology & Systematics |
| If
English is your primary language and you would like to volunteer
to provide editorial assistance to our colleagues, please
follow these guidelines |
If
you feel confident in your ability to write English and offer good critical
feedback to others, please consider signing up to help with this program.
SSAR welcomes the participation of its graduate student members in this
project. You can have your name added to the above list by sending your
name, email address, and area of expertise to the SSAR
Webmaster.
Please
be narrow and specific in the areas of expertise that you list. For
example, if you work in "snake systematics" or "snake thermal ecology,"
it would be better to say that than "snake biology." By keeping your
area narrow you are assuring yourself that any manuscripts that come
your way will be in your area of greatest interest. This will make it
both easier for you to follow the manuscript and to offer good counsel
to the authors.
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