AB

Aquatic Biology

Aquatic Biology is a gold Open Access journal and a multidisciplinary forum for research on the biology of organisms in marine, brackish and fresh waters. SEDAO (Sexuality and Early Development in Aquatic Organisms), an international journal that covered all aspects of reproduction and early development in marine, brackish and freshwater organisms, was incorporated into AB in late 2015.

Online: ISSN 1864-7790

Print: ISSN 1864-7782

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/ab

About the journal

According to the Journal Citation Reports 2024 release, AB features an impact factor (IF) of 1.3 from 1250 total cites (5-year IF = 2.0), Immediacy Index = 0.0, Eigenfactor = 0.00023, JCI = 046.

Aim

AB aims to operate as a worldwide forum for research on all aspects of the biology of organisms living in marine, fresh or brackish waters, or in the intertidal zone, floodplains, connected ground waters, and other wetlands. AB thus acts as a bridge between scientists working on organisms from all of these domains. Multidisciplinary and international, the journal reflects the evolving needs of the scientific community it serves.

Scope

AB publishes rigorously refereed and carefully selected Feature Articles, Research Articles, Reviews and Notes, as well as Comments/Reply Comments (for details see MEPS 228:1), Theme Sections, Opinion Pieces (previously called 'As I See It') (for details consult the Guidelines for Authors) concerned with the biology, physiology, biochemistry and genetics (including the ’omics‘) of all aquatic organisms under laboratory and field conditions, and at all levels of organisation and investigation. Areas covered include:

  • Biological aspects of biota: Evolution and speciation; life histories; biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography; population genetics; biological connectedness between marine and freshwater biota; paleobiology of aquatic environments; invasive species.
  • Biochemical and physiological aspects of aquatic life; synthesis and conversion of organic matter (mechanisms of auto- and heterotrophy, digestion, respiration, nutrition); thermo-, ion, osmo- and volume-regulation; stress and stress resistance; metabolism and energy budgets; non-genetic and genetic adaptation.
  • Species interactions: Environment–organism and organism–organism interrelationships; predation: defenses (physical and chemical); symbioses.
  • Molecular biology of aquatic life.
  • Behavior: Orientation in space and time; migrations; feeding and reproductive behavior; agonistic behavior.
  • Toxicology and water-quality effects on organisms; anthropogenic impacts on aquatic biota (e.g. pollution, fisheries); stream regulation and restoration.
  • Theoretical biology: mathematical modelling of biological processes and species interactions.
  • Methodology and equipment employed in aquatic biological research; underwater exploration and experimentation.
  • Exploitation of aquatic biota: Fisheries; cultivation of aquatic organisms: use, management, protection and conservation of living aquatic resources.
  • Reproduction and development in marine, brackish and freshwater organisms

AB was founded and is owned by Inter-Research as an outlet for research on the biology of aquatic organisms. It thereby complements the material that appears in MEPS and AME.

As of 1 January 2016, SEDAO has been incorporated into AB.

Conflict of interest

Authors, Reviewers and Editors must disclose relationships (e.g. financial, economic, institutional) that may affect the integrity of the scientific process. Please refer to our Conflict of interest policy for details.

Neutrality of editorial decisions

Inter-Research journals are following the Committee of Publication Ethics advice on neutrality for editorial decisions. In brief, editorial decisions in Inter-Research journals shall not be affected by the origins of the manuscript, including the nationality, ethnicity, political beliefs, race or religion of the authors. Decisions to review, edit and publish shall not be determined by the policies of governments or other agencies, but just by the journals themselves, and are purely based on scientific merit of the submitted work and the work’s fit within each journal’s scope.