Reflections on the role of publications by scientific societies in celebration of the 25th year for Acta Botanica Brasilica
Acta Botanica Brasilica 25(2): 253-254. 2011.
Editorial / Editorial
Reflections on the role of publications by scientific societies in
celebration of the 25th year for Acta Botanica Brasilica
From your sister society to the north: the Botanical Society of America
Upon the occasion of the 25th year of publication of
Acta Botanica Brasilica (ABB) by the Brazilian Botanical
Society, we offer some reflections on the importance of
the American Journal of Botany to the Botanical Society of
America. As the primary scientific journal of our society,
publication began in 1914, 21 years after the society was
founded in 1893. Our journal, as does ABB, accepts papers
on every aspect of plant science. The journal is particularly
rich in papers that focus on organismal approaches. Papers
on plant genomics, molecular evolution, and community
and ecosystem ecology are less well-represented, although
research published in the journal informs these topics.
Because of its organismal focus, the journal is an important
resource for those researchers looking for information on
plants. Our journals also attract interest in our societies,
as researchers become aware of others sharing common
research interests. Attendance at national meetings and
interactions with other researchers is one outcome of publication of our journals. For many of us who were trained as
botanists, our first introduction to the society was through
meetings as students. For us, the journal has played a role
as the venue to publish our research and for information on
the important research of others in botany. Journals are the
basic resource for fundamental research in science; most
major scientific societies support some publication that
contributes to the scientific compendium of knowledge in
the world. However, as we approach our hundredth year
of publication and as you celebrate your 25th year, the publication world is changing rapidly due to electronic access.
This rapidly changing landscape raises important questions
for authors, societies, publishers, and researchers. Will the
journal remain the important work, or will the actual article
become the more important item for consideration? How
will societies survive on a new business model, independent
of the income from the purchase of the journal? If access
to journals is free, who pays for costs of the peer review
and editing to ensure that papers are of the highest quality? Time alone will answer these questions, but societies
must be ready and carefully consider now how to meet the
challenges ahead. Researchers need to think about paying
to publish, rather than paying for the published material.
Acta bot. bras. 25(2): 253-254. 2011.
ACTA_V 25 (2)_Editorial.indd 253
As we think about our journal and its importance for our
society, the definitions of journal provide thought- provoking
material. Of course, a definition of “journal”, as the definition
of ” acta”, is a periodical presenting articles on a particular
subject such as plant science. The word “journal” however,
has additional meanings, such as a personal record of occurrences, experiences, and reflections kept on a regular basis;
a diary. And isn’t that exactly what our journal does for our
society? It presents the experiences and knowledge of our
various researchers who have published their hypotheses,
data, and conclusions over time in the journal. Looking back
through the topics of the journal, we can trace the important
emphases of the field of botany – from discovery of species
and their geographical occurrences, the accumulation of
these species into floras, and the growth patterns and processes of these organisms, to more detailed morphological
and anatomical studies, through genetic and physiological
processes influencing the form and structure of plants, to
broad ecosystem relationships among all organisms including the plants and the physical factors that influence these
organisms. At all levels of botanical investigation, we see
shifts in experimental approaches with increasing use of
molecular tools for studies on phylogenies, gene action,
and cellular processes. Thus, the journal becomes a personal
reflection of the growth and development of the society over
the last century, and provides valuable information about
the scientific process in plant biology. This observation leads
directly to another definition of the word “journal” as an official record of daily proceedings, as of a legislative body or
a ship’s log. Perhaps not daily, but the monthly publication
of the journal has provided an official record of the proceedings happening throughout the diverse research disciplines
of the society. The journal provides an important historical
thread that ties the society members together with all who
have preceded us, and which we hope will continue to form
that bond with future botanists.
In addition, the journal provides a record of the best
in scientific research produced by a researcher. An article
written according to strict guidelines and peer reviewed to
provide validity for the results becomes part of the scientific
record. Journal articles document the complete research
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Acta Botanica Brasilica 25(2): 253-254. 2011.
Nota Científica / Scientific Note
process and provide a means of repeating the research to
verify the results. Students reading and discussing these
articles in journals learn the scientific method and the rules
for scientific publication, as students have for centuries. They
will continue to do so, whether these articles are produced in
printed format on paper or in electronic online publications,
which is certainly the way most scientists now are accessing
scientific literature. Given the ubiquity of information on the
web, endorsement of articles by a scientific society becomes
even more critical to verify the authenticity and value of the
work. A web-based, “rate this article” approach may work in
some cases, but not in scientific disciplines.
Journals have another role as well- they can lead the way
by encouraging research directions that are likely to lead to
new and promising results. For example, the editors of journals and the members of a society can solicit contributions
for special issues of a journal that bring together papers on
topics that are important to a field, but may not have been
well-represented in the journal. These special issues may have
synergistic effects by heightening an awareness of research
approaches especially beneficial to a discipline. Special issues may also be useful for reflecting on the status of a field,
and integrating research approaches over a broad range of
disciplines. Two recent issues of the American Journal of
Botany exemplify these approaches. The journal celebrated
the Darwin Bicentennial by publishing a special issue in 2009
on Darwin’s “abominable mystery,” the apparently sudden
appearance of flowering plants in the Cretaceous Period.
This issue of the journal contained a very broad array of
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