Instructions for authors
						
 Instructions for Authors
 
 
Manuscripts published in JPPR are free of charge. Only colour figures and 
 photos are payed 61.5 € per one colour page
JPPR publishes original research papers, short communications, critical 
 reviews, and book reviews covering all areas of modern plant protection. 
 Subjects include phytopathological virology, bacteriology, mycology and 
 applied nematology and entomology as well as topics on protecting crop 
 plants and stocks of crop products against diseases, viruses, weeds, etc. 
 Submitted manuscripts should provide new facts or confirmatory data.
All manuscripts should be written in high-quality English. Non-English native 
 authors should seek appropriate help from English-writing professionals 
 before submission.
The manuscript should be submitted only via the JPPR Editorial System (http://www.editorialsystem.com/jppr). 
 The authors must also remember to upload a scan of a completed License to 
 Publish (point 4 and a handwritten signature are of particular 
 importance). ALP form is available at the Editorial System.
The day the manuscript reaches the editors for the first time is given upon 
 publication as the date ‘received’ and the day the version, corrected by 
 the authors is accepted by the reviewers, is given as the date ‘revised’. 
 All papers are available free of charge at the Journal’s webpage (www.plantprotection.pl).
However, colour figures and photos cost 61.5 € per one colour page.
 
 General information for preparing a manuscript
 
 All text should be written in a concise and integrated way, by focusing on 
 major points, findings, breakthrough or discoveries, and their broad 
 significance. All running text should be in Times New Roman 12, 1.5 
 spacing with all margins 2.5 cm on all sides.
 
 Original article
 
 
The original research articles should contain the following sections:
 Title – the title should be unambiguous, understandable to 
 specialists in other fields, and must reflect the contents of the paper. 
 No abbreviations may be used in the title.
  Name(s) of author(s) with affiliations footnoted added only to the 
 system, not visible in the manuscript (Double Blind Reviews). The names of 
 the authors should be given in the following order: first name, second 
 name initial, surname. Affiliations should contain: name of institution, 
 faculty, department, street, city with zip code, and country.
 Abstract – information given in the title does not need to be 
 repeated in the abstract. The abstract should be no longer than 300 words. 
 It must contain the aim of the study, methods, results and conclusions. If 
 used, abbreviations should be limited and must be explained when first 
 used.
 Keywords – a maximum of 6, should cover the most specific terms 
 found in the paper. They should describe the subject and results and must 
 differ from words used in the title.
 Introduction – a brief review of relevant research (with references 
 to the most important and recent publications) should lead to the clear 
 formulation of the working hypothesis and aim of the study. It is 
 recommended to indicate what is novel and important in the study.
 Materials and Methods – in this section the description of 
 experimental procedures should be sufficient to allow replication. 
 Organisms must be identified by scientific name, including authors. The 
 International System of Units (SI) and their abbreviations should be used. 
 Methods of statistical processing, including the software used, should 
 also be listed in this section.
 Results – should be presented clearly and concisely without 
 deducting and theori sing. Graphs should be preferred over tables to 
 express quantitative data.
 Discussion – should contain an interpretation of the results ( 
 without unnecessary repetition) and explain the influence of experimental 
 factors or methods. It should describe how the results and their 
 interpretation relate to the scientific hypothesis and/or aim of the 
 study. The discussion should take into account the current state of 
 knowledge and up-to-date literature. It should highlight the significance 
 and novelty of the paper. It may also point to the next steps that will 
 lead to a better understanding of the matters in question.
 Acknowledgements – of people, grants, funds, etc. should be placed 
 in a separate section before the reference list. The names of funding 
 organizations should be written in full.
 References
In the text, papers with more than two authors should be cited by the last 
 name of the first author, followed by et al. (et al. in italics), a space, 
 and the year of publication (example: Smith et al. 2012). If the cited 
 manuscript has two authors, the citation should include both last names, a 
 space, and the publication year (example: Marconi and Johnston 2006).
In the Reference section, a maximum of ten authors of the cited paper may be 
 given. All references cited in the text must be listed in the Reference 
 section alphabetically by the last names of the author(s) and then 
 chronologically. The year of publication follows the authors’ names. All 
 titles of the cited articles should be given in English. Please limit the 
 citation of papers published in languages other than English. If necessary 
 translate the title into English and provide information concerning the 
 original language in brackets (e.g. in Spanish).
The list of references should only include works from the last ten years that 
 have had the greatest impact on the subject. Older references can be cited 
 only if they are important for manuscript content.
The full name of periodicals should be given.
If possible, the DOI number should be added at the end of each reference.
The following system for arranging references should be used:
Journal articles
Jorjani M., Heydari A., Zamanizadeh H.R., Rezaee S., Naraghi L., Zamzami P. 
 2012. Controlling sugar beet mortality disease by application of new 
 bioformulations. Journal of Plant Protection Research 52 (3): 303-307. 
 DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10045-012-0049-9
Online articles
Turner E., Jacobson D.J., Taylor J.W. 2011. Genetic architecture of a 
 reinforced, postmating, reproductive isolation barrier between Neurospora 
 species indicates evolution via natural selection. PLoS Genetics 7 (8): 
 e1002204. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002204
Books
Bancrof J.D., Stevens A. 1996. Theory and Practice of Histological Techniques. 
 4th ed. Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh, UK, 776 pp.
Book chapters
Pradhan S.K. 2000. Integrated pest management. p. 463-469. In: "IPM System in 
 Agriculture. Cash Crop" (R.K. Upadhyaya, K.G. Mukerji, O.P. Dubey, eds.). 
 Aditya Books Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi, India, 710 pp.
Online documents
Cartwright J. 2007. Big stars have weather too. IOP Publishing PhysicsWeb. 
 Available on: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002204
 
 Tables, Figures, Phothographs, Drawings
 
 
Tables and figures should be uploaded as separated files at the submission 
 stage. Their place in the manuscript should be clearly indicated by 
 authors. Colour figures are accepted at no charge for the electronic 
 version. In the hardcopy version of the journal, colour figures cost (65,5 
 € per one colour page). When attaching files please indicate if you want 
 colour only in the online version or in both the online and the hardcopy.
Photographs and RGB bitmaps should be provided in JPG or TIFF file format. 
 They must have no less than 300 dpi resolution. The text column should be 
 8 cm wide and they must be at least 1000 pixels wide. Please send original 
 (not resized) photograph(s), straight from a digital camera, without any 
 text descriptions on the photo.
Bitmaps combined with text object descriptions should be provided in MS Word 
 or MS Powerpoint format. Text objects using Arial font-face should be 
 editable (changing font-face or font size).
Drawings should be provided in MS Word, MS Powerpoint, CorelDRAW or EPS file 
 format and stored with original data file. Text objects using Arial 
 font-face should be editable (changing font-face or font size).
Charts (MS Excel graphs) should be provided in MS Excel file format, and 
 stored with original MS Excel data file without captions but with the 
 number of the figure attached. Please do not use bitmap fills for bar 
 charts. Use colour fills only if necessary.
Captions and legends should be added at the end of the text, referred to as 
 "Fig." and numbered consecutively throughout the paper.
 
 Rapid communications
 
 
Rapid communications should present brief observations which do not warrant 
 the length of a full paper. However, they must present completed studies 
 and follow the same scientific standards as original articles.
Rapid communications should contain the following sections:
 Title
 Abstract - less than 300 words
 Key words - maximum 6
 Text body
 Acknowledgements
 References
The length of such submissions is limited to 1500 words for the text, one 
 table, and one figure.
 
 Reviews
 
 
Review articles are invited by the editors.Unsolicited reviews are also 
 considered. The length is limited to 5000 words with no limitations on 
 figures and tables and a maximum of 150 references.
Mini-Review articles should be dedicated to "hot" topics and limited to 3000 
 words and a maximum two figures, two tables and 20 references.