Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of Hymenoptera Research | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of Hymenoptera Research |
| Discipline | Entomology |
| Abbreviation | J. Hymenopt. Res. |
| Publisher | Pensoft Publishers |
| History | 1992–present |
| Frequency | Irregular |
| Issn | 1026-3429 |
| Eissn | 1314-2607 |
Journal of Hymenoptera Research is a peer-reviewed scientific periodical focusing on the systematics, taxonomy, ecology, behavior, and conservation of Hymenoptera. Established in the early 1990s, it publishes original research, reviews, monographs, and checklists relevant to bees, wasps, ants, and sawflies. The journal serves an international community of taxonomists, field biologists, curators, and conservationists.
The journal was founded in 1992 by a coalition of European and North American entomologists linked to institutions such as the Natural History Museum, London, Smithsonian Institution, University of California, Berkeley, Hungarian Natural History Museum, and the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences. Early editorial leadership included researchers associated with American Museum of Natural History, Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen, and Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales. Over time the publication shifted publishers, involving houses like E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung and later Pensoft Publishers, reflecting broader trends in scholarly communication exemplified by debates at forums like the World Conference on Research Integrity and meetings hosted by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.
The journal concentrates on taxonomic revisions, faunistic surveys, phylogenetic analyses, and natural history notes concerning Hymenoptera taxa such as Formicidae, Apidae, Vespidae, Ichneumonidae, and Tenthredinidae. Articles commonly address geographic regions including Nearctic realm, Palearctic realm, Neotropical realm, Afrotropical realm, and Australasian realm. Contributions often employ methods from researchers affiliated with Max Planck Society, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and the Royal Society networks, and cite codes and rulings from the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature and standards discussed at the International Barcode of Life initiatives.
Editorial boards have included curators and taxonomists from organizations such as the Natural History Museum, London, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Field Museum of Natural History, University of Oxford, and University of Helsinki. The editorial process follows peer review standards similar to practices at journals like Zootaxa, Systematic Biology, and Journal of Natural History. Production and digital archiving rely on infrastructures linked to CrossRef, DOAJ, CLOCKSS, and repositories used by the Biodiversity Heritage Library community.
The journal is indexed in major bibliographic services and databases operated by organizations such as Clarivate Analytics, Scopus (Elsevier), BIOSIS, and CAB International. Metadata and abstracts are discoverable through platforms run by Web of Science Group, Google Scholar, and consortia serving the European Research Council community. Taxonomic acts published in the journal are registered with ZooBank and integrated into aggregators used by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility.
Within specialist circles, the journal has been cited in works produced by researchers at Cornell University, University of California, Davis, University of São Paulo, ETH Zurich, and Chinese Academy of Sciences. Its contributions inform conservation assessments used by bodies such as the IUCN and collaborative projects funded by agencies like the National Science Foundation and European Commission. Reviews and community discussions have appeared alongside commentary in outlets associated with Entomological Society of America meetings and symposia organized by the International Union for the Study of Social Insects.
The journal has published influential taxonomic revisions and species descriptions referenced in monographs from Harvard University Press and databases curated by the Natural History Museum, London and Smithsonian Institution. Significant papers include regional checklists influencing faunal syntheses for Madagascar, Borneo, Amazon Basin, Mediterranean Basin, and Siberia, and phylogenetic studies cited in syntheses by authors from University of Göttingen, Monash University, and Université de Lyon. Several nomenclatural acts have been incorporated into resources managed by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature and catalogues used by the Royal Entomological Society.
Published articles are distributed under open-access terms by publishers including Pensoft Publishers and are harvested by aggregators such as PubMed Central when applicable, and indexed in platforms used by institutions like University of Cambridge, Yale University, University of Tokyo, University of Cape Town, and Universidade de São Paulo. Libraries and museums including the Natural History Museum, Vienna, American Museum of Natural History, and National Museum of Natural History (France) provide access through their catalogues and interlibrary services.
Category:Entomology journals Category:Open access journals