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Journal of Economic Entomology
基本信息
期刊名称 Journal of Economic Entomology
J ECON ENTOMOL
期刊ISSN 0022-0493
期刊官方网站 https://academic.oup.com/jee
是否OA No
出版商 Oxford University Press
出版周期 Bimonthly
文章处理费 登录后查看
始发年份 1908
年文章数 241
影响因子 2.2(2023)  scijournal影响因子  greensci影响因子
中科院SCI期刊分区
大类学科 小类学科 Top 综述
农林科学3区 ENTOMOLOGY 昆虫学2区
CiteScore
CiteScore排名 CiteScore SJR SNIP
学科 排名 百分位 4.6 0.743 0.928
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Insect Science
34/181 81%
Environmental Science
Ecology
119/461 74%
补充信息
自引率 9.1%
H-index 90
SCI收录状况 Science Citation Index Expanded
官方审稿时间 登录后查看
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PubMed Central (PMC) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog?term=0022-0493%5BISSN%5D
投稿指南
期刊投稿网址 https://jee.oxfordjournals.org/for_authors/index.html
收稿范围
The Journal of Economic Entomology is the most-cited entomological journal and publishes articles on the economic significance of insects and other arthropods. The journal is published bimonthly in February, April, June, August, October, and December. In addition to research articles, the Journal of Economic Entomology publishes reviews, forum articles, short communications, and letters to the editor. The journal includes the following sections: 

Apiculture & Social Insects: This section addresses multiple aspects of managed bees (both social and solitary), including but not limited to, pollination, management, pathology and IPM, toxicology, genetics and breeding, and behavior, particularly as they pertain to commercial management practices and application. This section also addresses other social insects of economic importance, such as ants, wasps and termites, that are important to agricultural or natural ecosystems.

Arthropods in Relation to Plant Disease: The transmission of pathogens within plant communities is an important phenomenon that has broad economic, environmental and ecological effects. Within this section, investigations into the specific relationships between each component (the plant, insect, and pathogen) are encouraged, as well as studies at the systems level.

Beneficial Uses of Insects: Insects are mass-cultured for products that they produce (e.g. silk [sericulture], biopharmaceuticals, food or feed (e.g. entomophagy), decomposition of wastes (e.g. bioconversion and bioremediation), and other uses. Submissions describing production, applications and economic or environmental benefits of these and related topics are encouraged.

Biological & Microbial Control: This section includes studies on biological control of pests utilizing predators, parasitoids and microbial agents (e.g. entomopathogenic bacteria, fungi, nematodes, and viruses) in sustainable integrated pest management systems. Submissions typically involve human intervention to enhance these strategies in managed systems but can also include the characterization of economically important natural mechanisms occurring in the landscape. 

Climate Change: Appropriate submissions address effects of climate variability and change on arthropods of economic importance. Topics can include direct effects of climate change on pest and beneficial arthropods, and indirect effects on pest management stemming from disruptions of the ecosystem. Changes in pests and pest management associated with modifications to agroecosystems and surrounding landscape, or other practices made in response to climate change are also considered. The research can be laboratory, field, or modeling-based, as long as the work is placed in the context of historical or projected shifts in climate at the global or regional scale.

Commodity Treatment & Quarantine Entomology: Commodity treatment covers research aimed at controlling arthropod pests that may be in or on a commodity to reduce damage, pest load, or risk of spread of the pest. Quarantine Entomology refers to procedures to mitigate the spread of invasive or quarantined insects that may be associated with a product.

Ecology & Behavior: This section includes applied aspects of dispersal, host finding, orientation to semiochemicals, host and other trophic interactions, phenology, and ecological modeling of economically important arthropods. Submissions must be relevant to pest management or lead to improvements in pest management systems. Applications typically include (but are not limited to) trapping and monitoring, semiochemical control techniques, and predictive models.

Ecotoxicology: Submissions should focus on effects and influences of insecticides or other pesticides or pesticidal materials on target and/or non-target arthropod species including acute toxicity and/or sublethal and behavioural effects, both at the individual and population level, and effects of non-pesticide pollutants on insect species and communities in ecosystems.

Field & Forage Crops: This section includes papers on field and forage-based cropping systems grown across multiple geographic areas and landscapes. It includes studies of basic ecology, management, sampling, and thresholds of associated insect and arthropod pests and beneficial species of economic importance. Ecologically-based, functional-based, and economic-based experimentation is encouraged, while limited surveys, insecticide screening, or first occurrence reports are discouraged without additional experimentation. Studies need to have relevance to species of economic importance and describe how the results are relevant to improving pest management.

Forest Entomology: This section focuses on insects and related organisms that are economically important in forested landscapes. Appropriate submissions include studies relevant to their management, including management-themed studies in population, community, and landscape ecology, life history strategies, ecosystem impacts, interactions with abiotic and biotic disturbances, monitoring, and management strategies of native and non-native arthropod species. 

Horticultural Entomology: Horticulture is the agriculture of plants grown for food and the improvement of the human environment, such as flowers and ornamental plants. This section covers the study of insects and other arthropods of economic significance to horticultural crops, including fruits and nuts, vegetables, trees and shrubs, greenhouse plants, turf and ornamentals.

Household & Structural Insects: This section includes all aspects of the biology and management of insects and other arthropods found in and around dwellings and commercial structures. Submissions may include (but are not limited to) pests of structures and household products as well as those that affect humans and pets.

Insecticide Resistance & Resistance Management: This section focuses on the evolution, ecology, physiology, biochemistry, toxicology, genetics and molecular biology of insecticide resistance for the purpose of resistance management.

Medical & Veterinary Entomology: This section focuses on arthropods that impact man or animals either as nuisance or injurious pests, including as vectors of disease agents. Research exploring economic or social impacts of these pests, their biology that may lead to better management, or that evaluate management programs targeting these pests are particularly suitable. Submissions on their biology as vectors of human pathogens typically are more appropriate for Journal of Medical Entomology.

Molecular Entomology: This section covers genetics, genomics, biochemistry and molecular biology, including but not limited to molecular methods for diagnostics, survey, and detection of invasive species; description of genes or genes families relevant to pest control; gene expression, qPCR, and RNAseq experiments; population genomics describing movement and distribution of pest and invasive species; and gene editing, RNAi and other functional genomic studies. Submissions can include both basic and applied research but must be clearly relevant to arthropods of economic importance and demonstrate how the results are relevant to their management. Simple descriptions of genomic resources are discouraged without additional experimental or comparative genomic aspects included. 

Plant Resistance: Appropriate submissions include studies that identify plants resistant to arthropods, characterize resistance responses, elucidate the underlying mechanisms of resistance, and determine the genetic basis of resistance. This section also includes studies on identification of biotypes and the use of resistant varieties in the integrated management of pest arthropods.

Sampling & Biostatistics: This section focuses on in-depth consideration of sampling and biostatistics relevant to economically important arthropods. Appropriate submissions may include comparisons of sampling plans and methods relative to temporal or spatial distribution, sensitivities of sampling methods across species and environments, and predictive modeling of arthropod populations, demography, and damage forecasting. Evaluation and application of statistical methodologies are welcomed when placed in context of pest management. Reporting of sampling and surveys for management and regulatory purposes are discouraged unless they are nested within an evaluation of efficiencies of sampling and survey methods across time, space, and environments.

Stored-Product: Stored products include all postharvest agricultural products that are durable and thus can be stored without refrigeration for months or years. Appropriate submission may include those on the biology and pest management of pest arthropods found on stored cereal grains and legumes, dried grain products, milled and processed products, dried fruits, nuts, herbs, spices, and various dried animal products such as aged cheeses and dried meats.
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参考文献格式
编辑信息

Editors-in-Chief

Dr. Mike Brewer

Texas A&M University

College Station, TX 77843

Phone: (361) 265-9201

mjbrewer@ag.tamu.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5556-8304


Dr. Nan-Yao Su 

University of Florida

Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33314

Phone: (954) 577-6339

nysu@ufl.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0431-5005


Dr. Frank G. Zalom

University of California-Davis

1 Shields Ave

Davis, CA 95616-5270

Phone: (530) 867-3394

fgzalom@ucdavis.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6604-1284


Deputy Editor

Lisa G. Neven

USDA-ARS

Yakima Agriculture Research Lab

5230 Konnowac Pass Rd

Wapato, WA 98951-9651

Phone: (509) 454-6556

lisa.neven@ars.usda.gov


Subject Editors

Apiculture and Social Insects

Reed M. Johnson

The Ohio State University, Wooster, OH

johnson.5005@osu.edu


Apiculture and Social Insects

James P. Strange

USDA-ARS-Pollinating Insects Research Unit, Logan, UT

James.Strange@ars.usda.gov


Apiculture and Social Insects

David R. Tarpy

North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC

david_tarpy@ncsu.edu


Arthropods in Relation to Plant Disease

Blake R. Bextine

University of Texas at Tyler, Tyler, TX

Blake_Bextine@uttyler.edu


Arthropods in Relation to Plant Disease

Silvia Rondon

Oregon State University, Hermiston, OR

silvia.rondon@oregonstate.edu


Biological and Microbial Control

Julio S. Bernal

Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

juliobernal@tamu.edu


Biological and Microbial Control

Denny Bruck

DuPont Pioneer, Johnston, IA

denny.bruck@gmail.com


Biological and Microbial Control

Surendra Dara

University of California Cooperative Extension, San Luis Obispo, CA

skdara@ucdavis.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4542-7206


Biological and Microbial Control

Eric W. Riddick

USDA-ARS, Stoneville, MS

eric.riddick@ars.usda.gov

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4795-961X


Biological and Microbial Control

Eric Wajnberg

INRA, Sophia Antipolis, France

eric.wajnberg@inra.fr

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6700-7114


Commodity Treatment and Quarantine

Dong H. Cha

USDA-ARS, Hilo, HI

dong.cha@ars.usda.gov

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3980-9707


Commodity Treatment and Quarantine Entomology

Lisa Neven

USDA-ARS, Yakima Agricultural Research, Wapato, WA

neven@yarl.ars.usda.gov


Ecology and Behavior 

Charles S. Burks

USDA-ARS, Parlier, CA

Charles.Burks@ars.usda.gov

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-0242-8644


Ecology and Behavior

Michael Furlong

University of Queensland, Australia

m.furlong@uq.edu.au


Ecology and Behavior

Yulin Gao

Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, China

gaoyulin@caas.cn


Ecology and Behavior

Tong-Xian Liu

Northwest A&F University, Yangling, Shaanxi, China

txliu@nwafu.edu.cn


Ecology and Behavior

Nikolaos Papadopoulos

University of Thessaly, N. Ionia, Greece

nikopap@uth.gr


Ecology and Behavior

Arash Rashed

University of Idaho, Moscow, ID

arashed@uidaho.edu


Ecotoxicology

Murray B. Isman

University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

murray.isman@ubc.ca

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3285-1315


Ecotoxicology

John D. Stark

Washington State University, Puyallup, WA

starkj@wsu.edu


Field and Forage Crops

Kristopher L. Giles

Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK

kris.giles@okstate.edu


Field and Forage Crops

Fred Musser

Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS

fm61@msstate.edu


Field and Forage Crops

Dominic Reisig

North Carolina State University, Plymouth, NC

ddreisig@ncsu.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9979-5813


Field and Forage Crops

Allan T. Showler

USDA-ARS, Kerrville, TX

allan.showler@ars.usda.gov


Forest Entomology

Kamal Gandhi

Warnell School Of Forestry/Natural Resources, Athens, GA

kgandhi@warnell.uga.edu


Forest Entomology

Timothy D. Schowalter

Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA

tschowalter@agcenter.lsu.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4405-6220


Forest Entomology

Brian T. Sullivan

USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Pineville, LA

briansullivan@fs.fed.us


Forest Entomology

Kimberly Wallin

University of Vermont, VT

kwallin@uvm.edu 

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6849-6351


Horticultural Entomology

Raymond A. Cloyd

Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS

rcloyd@ksu.edu


Horticultural Entomology

Jana Lee

USDA-ARS, Corvallis, OR

jana.lee@ars.usda.gov


Horticultural Entomology

Joseph E. Munyaneza

USDA-ARS, Yakima Agricultural Research, Wapato, WA

joseph.munyaneza@ars.usda.gov


Horticultural Entomology

Anne Nielsen

Rutgers University, Bridgeton, NJ

nielsen@aesop.rutgers.edu


Horticultural Entomology

Cesar Rodriguez-Saona

Rutgers University, Chatsworth, NJ

crodriguez@aesop.rutgers.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5888-1769


Household and Structural Insects

Arthur G. Appel

Auburn University, Auburn, AL

appelag@auburn.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6858-1900


Household and Structural Insects

Mary L. Cornelius

USDA ARS SRRC, Beltsville, MD

mary.cornelius@ars.usda.gov


Household and Structural Insects

Michael K. Rust

University of California-Riverside

michael.rust@ucr.edu


Insecticide Resistance and Resistance Management

Troy Anderson

University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE

tanderson44@unl.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9403-2833


Insecticide Resistance & Resistance Management

Lisa Bird

NSW Department of Primary Industries, Tamworth Agricultural Institute, Australia

lisa.bird@dpi.nsw.gov.au


Insecticide Resistance and Resistance Management

Aaron J. Gassmann

Iowa State University, Ames, IA

aaronjg@iastate.edu


Insecticide Resistance and Resistance Management

Raul N. C. Guedes

Universidade Federal de Vicosa, Vicosa, MG, Brazil

mguedes@ufv.br


Insecticide Resistance and Resistance Management

Kun Yan Zhu

Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS

kzhu@oznet.ksu.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9372-8030


Medical and Veterinary Entomology

Alec C. Gerry

University of California at Riverside, Riverside, CA

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8494-3588


Medical and Veterinary Entomology

Kimberly H. Lohmeyer

USDA-ARS, Kerrville, TX

kim.lohmeyer@ars.usda.gov

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5656-8568


Medical and Veterinary Entomology

Jeb P. Owen

Washington State University, Pullman, WA

jowen@wsu.edu


Molecular Entomology

Scott M. Geib

USDA-ARS-PBARC, Hilo, HI

scott.geib@ars.usda.gov

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9511-5139


Molecular Entomology

Raul F. Medina

Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

rfmedina@tamu.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8697-8901


Molecular Entomology

Brian Rector

USDA-ARS-GBRRU, Reno, NV

brian.rector@ars.usda.gov


Molecular Entomology

Erin D. Scully

USDA-ARS-CGAHR, Manhattan, KS

erin.scully@ars.usda.gov


Molecular Entomology

Kent S. Shelby

USDA-ARS-BCIRL, Columbia, MO

kent.shelby@ars.usda.gov


Molecular Entomology

Cecilia Tamborindeguy

Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

ctamborindeguy@tamu.edu 

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0933-5785


Molecular Entomology

Adam Chun Nin Wong

University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

adamcnwong@ufl.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9360-429X


Plant Resistance

Louis Hesler

USDA-ARS-NCARL, Brookings, SD

louis.hesler@ars.usda.gov


Plant Resistance

Frank B. Peairs

Colorado State University, Fort Collins

Frank.Peairs@colostate.edu

orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6591-7958


Stored Products

James Campbell

USDA-ARS-CGAHR, Manhattan, KS

james.campbell@ars.usda.gov


Stored Products

Rizana Mahroof

South Carolina State University, Orangeburg, SC

rmahroof@scsu.edu


Stored Products

Thomas W. Phillips

Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS

twp1@ksu.edu


Associate Editors

Troy D. Anderson

Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA

anderst@vt.edu


Peter Follett

USDA-ARS, Hilo, HI

peter.follett@ars.usda.gov


Guy Hallman

USDA-ARS, Manhattan, KS

Guy.Hallman@ars.usda.gov


Neelendra Joshi

University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture, Fayetteville, AR

nkjoshi@uark.edu


William Moar

Bayer Crop Science, Chesterfield, MO

william.moar@monsanto.com


Editorial Board

Xuguo Zhou

University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY

Physiology, Biochemistry, and Toxicology


Cheryle A. O'Donnell, Chair

USDA-PPQ-NIS, Tuscon, AZ

Systematics, Evolution & Biodiversity


Jarrad R. Prasifka

USDA-ARS-NCSL, Fargo, ND

Plant-Insect Ecosystems 


Steven R. Skoda

USDA-ARS Scrwworm Research Unit, Kerrville, TX

Medical, Urban, and Veterinary Entomology


Dr. Andy P. Michel

Ohio State University, Wooster, OH

Molecular Ecology and Evolution

michel.70@osu.edu


Director of Publications and Communications

Lisa Junker

Entomological Society of America

3 Park Place, Suite 307

Annapolis, MD 21401-3722

Phone: 301-731-4535, ext. 3020

Fax: 301-731-4538

ljunker@entsoc.org


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