Language Editing Service
Optional language support to improve clarity and readability in entomology manuscripts.
Journal at a Glance
ISSN: 2768-5209
DOI Prefix: 10.14302/issn.2768-5209
License: CC BY 4.0
Peer reviewed open access journal
Scope Alignment
Insect ecology, systematics, behavior, pest management, vector biology, and pollinator health. We prioritize validated field and laboratory methods.
Publishing Model
Open access, single blind peer review, and rapid publication after acceptance and production checks. Metadata validation and DOI registration are included.
IJE offers language editing support for authors who want to improve clarity, grammar, and technical expression before peer review. Editing focuses on improving readability while preserving the technical accuracy of entomology research.
- Grammar, spelling, and punctuation improvements
- Clarity and flow for technical descriptions
- Consistency in terminology and notation
- Formatting guidance for tables and figure captions
Receive Quote
The editorial office provides a quote and timeline.
Editing
Professional editors review the manuscript for clarity and language.
Return
You receive the edited version with suggested changes.
Language editing does not guarantee acceptance. Manuscripts are still evaluated on scientific merit and scope fit.
Authors remain responsible for the accuracy of technical content after editing.
Authors writing in a second language, or teams preparing complex entomology manuscripts, may benefit from professional editing. Editing is optional and does not influence editorial decisions.
- Provide full taxonomic identification with authority, and reference voucher specimens or curated collections when applicable.
- Report life stage, sex, and developmental conditions for insects to support reproducibility and comparative analysis.
- Describe collection sites with coordinates, habitat description, and sampling period to contextualize ecological findings.
- When using traps or baits, specify trap type, exposure duration, and lure composition to enable replication.
- Include details on rearing conditions such as temperature, humidity, photoperiod, and diet formulations.
- If molecular methods are used, report primers, sequencing platforms, and quality control thresholds.
- For behavioral assays, describe acclimation periods, arena design, and observation windows.
- State how pesticide or control treatments were applied, including dose, timing, and formulation details.
- Include host plant or host organism identification when studying herbivory or vector interactions.
- Discuss environmental variables such as seasonality, land use, or climate that may influence outcomes.
- Report sample sizes, replication strategy, and statistical models used for inference.
- Describe biosecurity or containment procedures for invasive or quarantine species.
- When reporting pollinator studies, include floral resources, visitation metrics, and landscape context.
- Provide details on insect pathogen detection, diagnostic protocols, and validation steps.
- If physiological assays are included, report calibration standards and instrumentation settings.
- Summarize limitations such as spatial coverage, sampling bias, or laboratory constraints.
- Clarify how results translate to integrated pest management or conservation practices.
- If data access is restricted, provide metadata and contact pathways for verification.
- Document ethical approvals for studies involving vertebrate hosts or sensitive field sites.
- Include a concise statement on how findings inform biodiversity monitoring or ecosystem services.
- Describe image analysis or morphometric workflows when identification relies on imaging.
- Specify if specimens were preserved, stored, or archived and how long term integrity was maintained.
- Include quality checks for barcoding, genomics, or transcriptomic analyses when relevant.
- Report any adverse or non target effects observed during control or intervention studies.
- Include specimen accession numbers and repository names for traceability and long term access.
- Describe photographic protocols, magnification, and scale references for morphological documentation.
- Clarify statistical corrections for spatial autocorrelation or repeated measures when applicable.
IJE is committed to rigorous, transparent publishing in entomological research. We emphasize reproducible methods, accurate taxonomy, and ethical compliance across all article types.
The editorial office supports authors, editors, and reviewers with clear guidance and responsive communication. For questions about scope or workflow, contact [email protected].
We encourage continuous improvement in reporting practices and share updates that help the community maintain high standards in insect science and arthropod research.
Need Language Support?
Contact the editorial office to request editing assistance.