Special Issue of AoB PLANTS on Plant Responses to Climate Change 

AoB PLANTS is soliciting submissions for an upcoming Special Issue to be 
published in 2014 titled 'Scaling Effects Regulating Plant Response to Global 
Change.'  AoB PLANTS is an open-access, nonprofit journal established in 2010, 
published by Oxford University Press (http://aobplants.oxfordjournals.org), and 
indexed in Web of Science.  The journal is growing rapidly and is intensifying 
its focus on environmental biology.  Its first Impact Factor score will be 
released in June.  

Edited by Elise Gornish (University of California, Davis) and Sebastian 
Leuzinger (Auckland University of Technology), this Special Issue will focus on 
the relationship between plant responses to global change and scale.  A growing 
number of studies suggest that the responses of plants to various forms of 
climate change frequently vary substantially with the temporal and spatial 
scale of the study.  Prominent examples include changes in effect size or even 
reversals in sign as experiments continue over many years or decades.  
Similarly, the effect sizes of climate-change studies often decrease with 
increasing level of organization (e.g., from leaf to tree).  There is an urgent 
need to synthesize this complexity and to quantify effect sizes and 
over-arching trends that are emerging across large spatial, temporal and 
organizational dimensions.  This special issue will offer a broad perspective 
on global-change research, dealing with effect sizes across ecosystems, 
temporal and spatial scales, and organizational levels.  

The following papers are scheduled for inclusion in this Special Issue, and 
many others will be added in the coming weeks:

Elise Gornish (University of California, Davis) & Sebastian Leuzinger (Auckland 
University of Technology)
'Interactive effects of global change and invasion across levels of 
organization in an old-field plant community'

Adam Langley (Villanova University) & Bruce Hungate (Northern Arizona 
University)
'The consequences of tradeoffs in plant responses to different global change 
drivers'

Thomas E. Miller, Will Ryan, Robert Ellis, and Abigail Pastore (Florida State 
University)
'The relationship between dynamic geomorphology and vegetation across spatial 
scales in coastal dune systems'

Stan Schymanski (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), Michael Roderick 
(Australian National University) & Murugesu Sivapalan (University of Illinois)
'Predicting long-term responses of vegetation water use to elevated atmospheric 
CO2'

If you are interested in submitting a paper for inclusion in this Special 
Issue, please send details to Guest Editor Elise Gornish ([email protected]) 
and the Chief Editor of AoB PLANTS, Hall Cushman ([email protected]).  

Papers submitted to AoB PLANTS undergo double-blind peer evaluation and receive 
first decisions quickly (typically within 30-40 days of submission).  
Additionally, all open-access fees for AoB PLANTS have been waived until 2015.  

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