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Back Matter Source: Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences, Vol. 351, No. 1348 (Dec. 29, 1996) Published by: The Royal Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/56288 . Accessed: 05/05/2014 03:43 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . The Royal Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 194.29.185.46 on Mon, 5 May 2014 03:43:01 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Back Matter

Back MatterSource: Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences, Vol. 351, No. 1348 (Dec. 29, 1996)Published by: The Royal SocietyStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/56288 .

Accessed: 05/05/2014 03:43

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

The Royal Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to PhilosophicalTransactions: Biological Sciences.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 194.29.185.46 on Mon, 5 May 2014 03:43:01 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Back Matter

Instructions to Authors

1. SCOPE Philosophical Transactions series B is published monthly, in A4 double-column format.

2. EDITORIAL AND PRODUCTION PROCEDURE Each paper received by the Royal Society is sent to referees; if their reports are favourable and the paper is accepted, authors are advised of any changes required. The Society encourages referees to report expeditiously, and will inform authors of the progress of the paper. However, should authors not receive a report within six weeks, they may contact the Editorial Office.

The paper is prepared for the printers once the authors have submitted a definitive version after acceptance. The paper is then sent to the printers, who prepare a proof for checking by the authors. Upon return of the authors' proof to the Editorial Office the corrections requested are checked, and the paper then goes to press. Any delays in submitting revised typescripts or in returning marked proofs will delay publication. Authors should respond as rapidly as possible so that the schedule for publishing their papers can be adhered to.

3. SUBMISSION Submitted papers must not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere. Submission of a paper by an author is taken as acceptance that the Editor's decision on the suitability of the paper for publication is final. In order to give the Royal Society authority to deal with matters of copyright, authors will be asked to assign to the Society the copyright in any article published in the journal. In assigning copyright, authors will not be forfeiting the right to use their original material elsewhere subsequently. This may be done without seeking permission and subject only to normal acknowledgement to the journal. However, it would be appreciated if authors would inform the Society in this event.

Papers should be submitted to the Editorial Office, The Royal Society, 6 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AG. When sending their papers authors may, if they wish, suggest suitable referees, but such suggestions will not necessarily be adopted.

Three copies of the typescript and all figures should be sent; in the case of papers where there are photographs as well as line drawings, the copies of the photographs should- preferably be prints, but photocopies for the use of referees are acceptable provided that they show the features described in the paper. The address, telephone and fax number, and electronic mail address of the author who will check proofs should be clearly indicated.

4. TYPESCRIPT Papers should be submitted initially as typescripts. After a paper has been accepted, and, if necessary, revised typescripts have been sent, authors should submit the final version both on floppy disk (MS-DOS and Macintosh disk formats are equally acceptable) and as a typescript. In addition to text files, we welcome the submission of electronically prepared artwork on disk.

Typescripts should be double-spaced, with both margins at least 3 cm, and with all sheets numbered in sequence and securely clipped together. Papers should be concisely written. Each paper must have an abstract (not exceeding 800 words or 5 % of the length of the paper, whichever is the less) on separate sheets, and a separate title-page giving the names of the authors and the address or addresses where the work was done. A short title for page-headings and up to six index entries should be given on the title page. Legends of figures numbered in sequence as they are to appear in the paper should be given, in double spacing, beginning on a separate sheet at the end of the paper.

Papers describing experiments with vertebrate animals will be accepted only if the procedures used are clearly described and conform to the British Home Office regulations for avoiding unnecessary suffering to the animals.

5. ILLUSTRATIONS Line drawings and half-tone illustrations should be prepared so that they are suitable for reduction to single or double column width (80 or 167 mm respectively). The normal text area is 167 mm x 253 mm. Half-tone illustrations will be printed within the text. Where half-tone illustrations or line drawings are mounted on card, the card should be flexible.

Labelling should be added to originals of line illustrations before submission if authors have the facilities to produce lettering of suitable quality and size, allowing for reduction during publication. If in doubt, authors are asked to submit one set of unlabelled, original line drawings in addition to a set of labelled, original drawings. Half-tone originals should be supplied lettered; examples of suitably lettered half-tones are shown overleaf. Light and electron micrographs must have a scale bar. Every copy of the typescript should be supplied with labelled copies of the figures.

Authors should indicate on an overlay any areas or subjects within a half-tone requiring critical reproduction. Authors' suggestions for reduction factors are welcomed, subject to the constraints of the production process.

6. STYLE Papers must conform to the style of the Philosophical Transactions series B in the way in which the headings and sub-headings of separate sections are arranged and the references are cited and listed. The International System of Units (SI) should be used wherever possible. Spelling is that of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Papers that have not been carefully checked by the authors before submission will be returned.

7. PROOFS AND OFFPRINTS A single proof only will be sent to authors for checking. Excessive authors' alterations made on the proof (other than corrections to errors made by the printer) will be charged to authors. Fifty free offprints will be provided; additional offprints may be ordered on the offprint order form, which is sent out with the proof.

[December 1996]

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Page 3: Back Matter

EXAMPLES OF AUTHOR-LETTERED HALF-TONES

TBM'

EIX ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~E

~~~~~ - : .

N Note: (i) the use of scale bars (length defined in the legend); (ii) figure number patches not too close to the

9't -6F _t t edge of each figure; (iii) the use of shadow lettering for labelling, to avoid the need for patches.

N Note: (i) the usc of whitc lettering on a dark background and black lettering on a light background; (ii) the sclf-contained scale bar; (iii) no figure number

f _tt ~ * S \< ;s supplied (it was added by the Society's artist).

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Page 4: Back Matter

FUTURE PAPERS IN PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS SERIES B

Philosophical Transactions: series B publishes original papers in all aspects of the biological sciences, including clinical science. Papers up to 25 000 words long are welcomed, particularly those of an interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary nature. Longer papers and reviews are also invited; authors intending to submit these should consult with the Editor at an early stage in preparation. Papers will be published rapidly (normally within six months of receipt).

The January issue of the journal will include the papers listed below.

M. S. Y. Lee The phylogeny of varanoid lizards and the affinities of snakes

H. -C. Spatz, H. Beismann, F. Bruchert, A. Emanns & T. Speck Biomechanics of the giant reed Arundo donax

V. Ph. Pastushenko & H. Schindler Level detection in ion channel records via idealization by statistical filtering and likelihood optimization

Y. Haraguchi & A. Sasaki Evolutionary pattern of intra-host pathogen antigenic drift: effect of cross- reactivity in immune response

H. G. Othmer & J. C. Dallon A discrete cell model with adaptive signalling for aggregation of dictyostelium discoideumn

J. A. Sherratt, B. T. Eagan & M. A. Lewis Oscillations and chaos behind predator-prey invasion: mathematical artifact or ecological reality?

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Page 5: Back Matter

FUTURE PAPERS IN PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS SERIES B

Philosophical Transactions: series B publishes original papers in all aspects of the biological sciences, including clinical science. Papers up to 25 000 words long are welcomed, particularly those of an interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary nature. Longer papers and reviews are also invited; authors intending to submit these should consult with the Editor at an early stage in preparation. Papers will be published rapidly (normally within six months of receipt).

The Proceedings of the Royal Society's Discussion Meeting on Atmospheric chemistry of sulphur in relation to aerosols, clouds and climate, held on 3 and 4 July 1996, will be published in the February issue of the journal and will include the papers listed below.

J. E. Lovelock Atmospheric sulphur and climate

J. Lelieveld Terrestrial sources and atmospheric distribution of sulphur

P. S. Liss Marine sulphur emissions

A. R. Ravishankara Laboratory studies of oxidation of sulphur compounds

C. N. Hewitt Field measurements of dimethyl sulphide and its oxidation products in the atmosphere

L. R. Poole Observations of stratospheric aerosols

F. L. Eisele Particle nucleation and growth in the troposphere

G. P. Ayers Atmospheric sulphur and CCN in marine air in the Southern Hemisphere

T. W. Choularton Effect of atmospheric chemistry on the scattering properties of particles

A. Slingo Climate model studies of sulphate aerosols and clouds

J. E. Hansen Climate responses to aerosols and gases

M. Legrand The ice-core record of atmospheric sulphur

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Page 6: Back Matter

THE ROYAL SOCIETY 1I111111 III 1

Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences 0962-8436(199612)351:1348

Series B Volume 351 Number 1348 29 December 1996

CONTENTS

tI. Ei,iiECRi-.N P. SAVOLAINEN & B. RosI.N pages 1661-1669 The genetical history of an isolated population of the endangered grey wolf Canis lupus: a study of nuclear and mitochondrial polymorphisms

A. P. RIVERO-LYN('I1 V. K. BROWN & J. [S. LAWTON 1671-1677 The impact of leaf shape on the feeding preference of insect herbivores: experimental and field studies with C(apsella and Phyllotreta

C. J. RHODES & R. M. ANDERSON 1679-1688 A scaling analysis of measles epidemics in a small population

D. EBERT, P. RAINEY, T. M. EMBLEY & D. SCHOIZ 1689-1701 Development, life cycle, ultrastructure and phylogenetic position of Pasteuria ramosa Metchnikoff 1888: rediscovery of an obligate endoparasite of Daphnia magna Straus

G. FRYER 1703-1712 The carapace of the branchiopod Crustacea

M. E. HoCHBERG, G. W. ELMES, J. A. THOMAS & R. T. CLARKE 1713-1724 Mechanisms of local persistence in coupled host-parasitoid associations: the case model of AIaculinea r-eheli and Ic(hneurnion ernierius

J. M. ZANKER 1725-1736 On the eleinieiitai-y mechanism underlying secondary motion processing

T. C. LACALLI 1737-1758 Mesodermal pattern and pattern repeats in the starfish bipinnaria larva, and related patterns in other deuterostomne larvae and chordates

D. M. WILLIAMS 1759--1782 Fossil species of the diatom genus Tetracyclus (Bacillariophyta, 'ellipticus' species group): morphology, interrelationships and the relevance of ontogeny

INIDEXES 1783-1791

* * *

VOIUME TITLE PAGE AND CONTENTS

INSTRUCTIONS TI o AUTHORS

Published in Great Britain by the Royal Society. 6 Carlton House Terrace, London SWIY SAG Printed in Great Britain for the Royal Society

by the University Press, Cambridge

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