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Impact Factor
2.323

Editor-in-Chief
Steven Cooke

Editorial board

About the journal

Conservation Physiology publishes research on all taxa focused on understanding and predicting how organisms, populations, ecosystems and natural resources respond to environmental change and stressors.

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First Impact Factor: 2.323

Conservation Physiology has received its first Impact Factor of 2.323.

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Open access

Conservation Physiology is a fully open access journal. Click below to find information about licensing and publishing charges, including discounts for SEB members.

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Author guidelines

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Latest Special and Virtual Issues

Changing World special issue cover image

New Special Issue: A Changing World - problems and solutions

This special issue of Conservation Physiology features papers by keynote speakers from the 'Conservation Physiology' sessions at the 2016 Society for Experimental Biology Annual Meeting in Brighton.

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Special Issue: Conservation Physiology of Marine Fishes

There is growing recognition that physiological research can contribute significantly to the resolution of management and conservation problems for marine fishes, and to the ability accurately to project impacts of environmental pressures. This perception was the impetus to establish a European Union Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) Action entitled ‘Conservation Physiology of Marine Fishes’ (COST FA1004, 2011-2015).

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Virtual Issue: Conservation Physiology of Animal Migrations

Migration is a widespread phenomenon among many taxa. This complex behaviour enables animals to exploit a diversity of temporally productive and spatially discrete habitats used to accrue various fitness benefits (e.g., growth, reproduction, predator avoidance). Migrations are generally challenging and require a complex interplay among genetics, behaviour, physiology, biomechanics, and the environment.

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Virtual Issue: Vertebrates, Stress and Conservation

We have assembled a “virtual” special issue on the topic of “vertebrate stress” given its importance in the emerging realm of conservation physiology. Papers spanning vertebrate taxa, stressors, and endpoints will be featured along with technical papers that advance techniques for studying stress in wild vertebrates. The virtual special issue is anchored by several synthetic perspective articles that will help to shape research on this topic.

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Conservation Physiology on the OUPBlog

Clownfish

In search of a “good” Anthropocene? Physiology can help

Can the Anthropocene be good? In the face of threats such as habitat loss, pollution, and urban and agricultural expansion, it is easy to feel discouraged about the future prospect of the world’s ecosystems and biodiversity. However, scientists and conservationists have a choice about how to approach their mission to preserve existing habitats and rehabilitate those already in a state of degradation.

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How do you study large whales?

The large whales, or “great whales” as they’re sometimes called, include most baleen whales (blue, fin, sei, humpback, grey, right, bowhead, and several more) and also one toothed species, the sperm whale. Perhaps no group of mammals on earth is as difficult to study. They spend most of their time below the water surface, they are difficult to find, and difficult to follow. They are too large to be kept in captivity. Perhaps most frustrating for physiology studies, there is simply no practical method of capturing a large whale alive to perform basic measurements or to get a blood sample.

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Conservation Physiology of Plants

Given the importance of plants as primary producers, which are indispensable for all other organisms, and the fact that 10,065 of the 21,286 species (47%) assessed by the IUCN Red List as globally threatened are plants, they clearly deserve more attention in the field of conservation physiology, and conservation science in general.

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Image credit: California wildflowers. By Rennett Stowe. CC-BY-2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

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The Society for Experimental Biology

SEB Masters of Biology

SEB Annual Meeting 2018

Discover the art of creating extraordinary science at SEB’s Annual Meeting in Florence, Italy from 3 – 6 July 2018 at the Firenze Fiera Congress and Exhibition Centre.

Abstract submission will open in October 2017 and registration will open in December 2017.

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SEB Get Connected

Make the most of who and what you know

The Society for Experimental Biology (SEB) is about extraordinary connections. We encourage cross fertilisation of ideas and disciplines. We bring biologists together from multiple disciplines and from around the world – sharing learning and experience, building contacts and relationships, creating links between new and established researchers.

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SEB Join the Pack

Membership

Expand the influence of experimental biology by joining SEB. Members receive a number of benefits including:

  • 10% discount on publishing in Conservation Physiology
  • Subsidised registration fees for SEB events
  • Discounts with partner organisations

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