The
African Journal of Agricultural Research (AJAR)
(ISSN 1991- 637X) publishes high-quality solicited and
unsolicited articles, in English, in all areas of
agriculture including arid soil research and
rehabilitation, agricultural genomics, stored products
research, tree fruit production, pesticide science, post
harvest biology and technology, seed science research,
irrigation, agricultural engineering, water resources
management, marine sciences, agronomy, animal science,
physiology and morphology, aquaculture, crop science,
dairy science, entomology, fish and fisheries, forestry,
freshwater science, horticulture, poultry science, soil
science, systematic biology, veterinary, virology,
viticulture, weed biology, agricultural economics and
agribusiness. The journal welcomes the submission of
manuscripts that meet the general criteria of
significance and academic excellence. All articles
published in AJAR will be peer-reviewed. Papers will be
published approximately one to two months after
acceptance.
Electronic submission of manuscripts is strongly encouraged, provided that the
text, tables, and figures are included in a single
Microsoft Word file (preferably in Arial font).
Submit manuscripts
as e-mail attachment to the Editorial Office at:
ajar@academicjournals.org
or
ajar_acadjourn@yahoo.com.
A manuscript number will be mailed to the corresponding
author same day or within 72 hours.
The
cover letter should include the corresponding
author's full address and telephone/fax numbers and
should be in an e-mail message sent to the Editor, with
the file, whose name should begin with the first
author's surname, as an attachment. The authors may also
suggest two to four reviewers for the manuscript (AJAR
may designate other reviewers).
The
African Journal of Agricultural Research
will only accept manuscripts submitted as e-mail
attachments.
For all
other correspondence that cannot be sent by e-mail,
please contact the editorial office (at
ajar@academicjournals.org
or
ajar_acadjourn@yahoo.com)
for the appropriate address or editorial board member to
mail it to.
Article
Types
Three
types of manuscripts may be submitted:
Regular articles: These should describe new and
carefully confirmed findings, and experimental
procedures should be given in sufficient detail for
others to verify the work. The length of a full paper
should be the minimum required to describe and interpret
the work clearly.
Short Communications: A Short Communication is suitable
for recording the results of complete small
investigations or giving details of new models or
hypotheses, innovative methods, techniques or apparatus.
The style of main sections need not conform to that of
full-length papers. Short communications are 2 to 4
printed pages (about 6 to 12 manuscript pages) in
length.
Review: Submissions of reviews and perspectives
covering topics of current interest are welcome and
encouraged. Reviews should be concise and no longer than
4-6 printed pages (about 12 to 18 manuscript pages).
Reviews manuscripts are also peer-reviewed.
Review Process
All
manuscripts are reviewed by an editor and members of the
Editorial Board or qualified outside reviewers.
Decisions will be made as rapidly as possible, and the
journal strives to return reviewers’ comments to authors
within 3 weeks. The editorial board will re-review
manuscripts that are accepted pending revision. It is
the goal of the AJAR to publish manuscripts within 8
weeks after submission.
Regular articles
All
portions of the manuscript must be typed double-spaced
and all pages numbered starting from the title page.
The Title should be a brief phrase describing the
contents of the paper. The Title Page should include the
authors' full names and affiliations, the name of the
corresponding author along with phone, fax and E-mail
information. Present addresses of authors should appear
as a footnote.
The
Abstract should be informative and completely
self-explanatory, briefly present the topic, state the
scope of the experiments, indicate significant data, and
point out major findings and conclusions. The Abstract
should be 100 to 200 words in length.. Complete
sentences, active verbs, and the third person should be
used, and the abstract should be written in the past
tense. Standard nomenclature should be used and
abbreviations should be avoided. No literature should be
cited.
Following the abstract, about 3 to 10 key words
that will provide indexing references to should be
listed.
A list
of non-standard Abbreviations should be added. In
general, non-standard abbreviations should be used only
when the full term is very long and used often. Each
abbreviation should be spelled out and introduced in
parentheses the first time it is used in the text. Only
recommended SI units should be used.
The
Introduction should provide a clear statement of the
problem, the relevant literature on the subject, and the
proposed approach or solution. It should be
understandable to colleagues from a broad range of
scientific disciplines.
Materials and methods should be complete enough
to allow experiments to be reproduced. However, only
truly new procedures should be described in detail;
previously published procedures should be cited, and
important modifications of published procedures should
be mentioned briefly. Capitalize trade names and include
the manufacturer's name and address. Subheadings should
be used. Methods in general use need not be described in
detail.
Results
should
be presented with clarity and precision. The results
should be written in the past tense when describing
findings in the authors' experiments. Previously
published findings should be written in the present
tense. Results should be explained, but largely without
referring to the literature. Discussion, speculation and
detailed interpretation of data should not be included
in the Results but should be put into the Discussion
section.
The
Discussion should interpret the findings in view of
the results obtained in this and in past studies on this
topic. State the conclusions in a few sentences at the
end of the paper. The Results and Discussion sections
can include subheadings, and when appropriate, both
sections can be combined.
The Acknowledgments of people, grants, funds, etc
should be brief.
Tables
should
be kept to a minimum and be designed to be as simple as
possible. Tables are to be typed double-spaced
throughout, including headings and footnotes. Each table
should be on a separate page, numbered consecutively in
Arabic numerals and supplied with a heading and a
legend. Tables should be self-explanatory without
reference to the text. The details of the methods used
in the experiments should preferably be described in the
legend instead of in the text. The same data should not
be presented in both table and graph form or repeated in
the text.
Figure legends
should
be typed in numerical order on a separate sheet.
Graphics should be prepared using applications capable
of generating high resolution GIF, TIFF, JPEG or
Powerpoint before pasting in the Microsoft Word
manuscript file. Tables should be prepared in Microsoft
Word. Use Arabic numerals to designate figures and upper
case letters for their parts (Fig 1). Begin each legend
with a title and include sufficient description so that
the figure is understandable without reading the text of
the manuscript. Information given in legends should not
be repeated in the text.
References:
In the text, a reference identified by means of an
author‘s name should be followed by the date of the
reference in parentheses. When there are more than two
authors, only the first author‘s name should be
mentioned, followed by ’et al‘. In the event that an
author cited has had two or more works published during
the same year, the reference, both in the text and in
the reference list, should be identified by a lower case
letter like ’a‘ and ’b‘ after the date to distinguish
the works.
Examples:
Abayomi (2000), Agindotan et al. (2003), (Kelebeni,
1983), (Usman and Smith, 1992), (Chege, 1998; Chukwura,
1987a,b; Tijani, 1993, 1995), (Kumasi et al., 2001)
References should be listed at the end of the paper in
alphabetical order. Articles in preparation or articles
submitted for publication, unpublished observations,
personal communications, etc. should not be included in
the reference list but should only be mentioned in the
article text (e.g., A. Kingori, University of Nairobi,
Kenya, personal communication). Journal names are
abbreviated according to Chemical Abstracts. Authors are
fully responsible for the accuracy of the references.
Examples:
Ogunseitan
OA (1998). Protein method for investigating mercuric
reductase gene expression in aquatic environments. Appl.
Environ. Microbiol. 64:695–702.
Gueye
M, Ndoye I, Dianda M, Danso SKA, Dreyfus B (1997).
Active N2
fixation in several Faidherbia albida
provenances. Ar. Soil Res. Rehabil. 11:63-70.
Charnley AK (1992). Mechanisms of fungal pathogenesis in
insects with particular reference to locusts. In: Lomer
CJ, Prior C (eds) Biological Controls of Locusts and
Grasshoppers: Proceedings of an international workshop
held at Cotonou, Benin. Oxford: CAB International, pp
181-190.
Mundree
SG, Farrant
JM (2000). Some physiological and molecular insights
into the mechanisms of desiccation tolerance in the
resurrection plant Xerophyta viscasa Baker. In
Cherry et al. (eds) Plant tolerance to abiotic stresses
in Agriculture: Role of Genetic Engineering, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, Netherlands, pp 201-222.
Babalola
OO
(2002).
Interactions between
Striga hermonthica (Del.) Benth. and
fluorescent rhizosphere bacteria Of Zea mays, L. and
Sorghum bicolor L. Moench for Striga suicidal
germination In Vigna unguiculata .
PhD dissertation, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Short Communications
Short
Communications are limited to a maximum of two figures
and one table. They should present a complete study that
is more limited in scope than is found in full-length
papers. The items of manuscript preparation listed above
apply to Short Communications with the following
differences: (1) Abstracts are limited to 100 words; (2)
instead of a separate Materials and Methods section,
experimental procedures may be incorporated into Figure
Legends and Table footnotes; (3) Results and Discussion
should be combined into a single section.
Proofs and Reprints:
Electronic proofs will be sent (e-mail attachment) to the
corresponding author as a PDF file. Page proofs are
considered to be the final version of the manuscript.
With the exception of typographical or minor clerical
errors, no changes will be made in the manuscript at the
proof stage. Because AJAR will be published freely
online, authors will have free electronic access to the
full text (in both HTML and PDF) of the article. Authors
can freely download the PDF file from which they can
print unlimited copies of their articles.
Copyright:
Submission of a manuscript implies: that the work
described has not been published before (except in the
form of an abstract or as part of a published lecture,
or thesis) that it is not under consideration for
publication elsewhere; that if and when the manuscript
is accepted for publication, the authors agree to
automatic transfer of the copyright to the publisher.
Fees and Charges:
A
handling fee of $500 will be billed to the authors for
each manuscript published.
Publication of an article in the African Journal of
Agricultural Research is not contingent upon the
author's ability to pay the charges. Neither is
acceptance to pay the handling fee a guarantee that the
paper will be accepted for publication. Authors may
still request (in advance) that the editorial office
waive some of the handling fee under special
circumstances