Journal of Mammal Research

Journal of Mammal Research

Journal of Mammal Research – Aim And Scope

Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

Submit Manuscript

Aims & Scope

Journal of Mammal Research publishes original research on the biology, ecology, evolution, behavior, and conservation of mammalian species worldwide, advancing scientific understanding of wild mammal populations and their ecosystems through rigorous empirical and theoretical studies.

Population Dynamics Behavioral Ecology Conservation Biology Species Distribution Ecosystem Processes

Core Research Domains

Population & Community Ecology

  • Population dynamics and demographic modeling
  • Density-dependent processes and carrying capacity
  • Metapopulation structure and connectivity
  • Community assembly and species interactions
  • Predator-prey dynamics and trophic cascades
  • Spatial ecology and habitat selection
Typical Fit Example

Long-term monitoring of gray wolf pack dynamics in response to prey availability and human disturbance across fragmented landscapes

Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology

  • Foraging strategies and optimal behavior theory
  • Mating systems and reproductive strategies
  • Social organization and group dynamics
  • Communication systems and sensory ecology
  • Cognitive abilities and problem-solving
  • Behavioral responses to environmental change
Typical Fit Example

Acoustic communication patterns in nocturnal bat species and their role in foraging coordination and territorial defense

Conservation Biology & Management

  • Threatened and endangered species recovery
  • Habitat fragmentation and corridor design
  • Human-wildlife conflict mitigation
  • Protected area effectiveness and design
  • Reintroduction and translocation programs
  • Climate change impacts and adaptation strategies
Typical Fit Example

Evaluating corridor effectiveness for large carnivore movement between protected areas using GPS telemetry and genetic connectivity analysis

Evolutionary Biology & Phylogenetics

  • Molecular phylogenetics and systematics
  • Population genetics and gene flow
  • Adaptive evolution and natural selection
  • Speciation processes and hybridization
  • Biogeography and historical distribution patterns
  • Morphological evolution and functional anatomy
Typical Fit Example

Phylogeographic analysis of rodent populations across mountain ranges revealing cryptic species diversity and Pleistocene refugia

Secondary Focus Areas

Cross-Disciplinary Research

  • Disease ecology and pathogen dynamics in wild populations
  • Ecosystem services provided by mammalian species
  • Landscape ecology and multi-scale habitat modeling
  • Urban ecology and synanthropic species adaptation
  • Paleontology and fossil record interpretation
  • Ecotoxicology and environmental contaminant effects

Methodological Innovations

  • Novel tracking technologies and telemetry systems
  • Non-invasive sampling techniques (eDNA, camera traps)
  • Bioacoustic monitoring and automated species identification
  • Spatial modeling and species distribution models
  • Population viability analysis and simulation modeling
  • Machine learning applications in behavioral analysis

Physiological Ecology

  • Energetics and metabolic adaptations to environment
  • Thermoregulation in extreme climates
  • Nutritional ecology and diet analysis
  • Reproductive physiology in wild populations
  • Stress physiology and endocrine responses
  • Seasonal adaptations and phenological shifts

Taxonomic Groups

  • Terrestrial mammals (carnivores, ungulates, rodents)
  • Marine mammals (cetaceans, pinnipeds, sirenians)
  • Primates (ecology, behavior, conservation)
  • Bats (chiroptera ecology and evolution)
  • Small mammals (insectivores, lagomorphs)
  • Rare and understudied taxonomic groups

Emerging Research Frontiers

  • Artificial intelligence and computer vision for automated wildlife monitoring
  • Genomics and transcriptomics of adaptation to rapid environmental change
  • Movement ecology and migration patterns under climate change
  • Microbiome research and host-microbe interactions in wild mammals
  • Citizen science and community-based monitoring programs
  • Novel conservation technologies (drones, satellite imagery, acoustic sensors)
Editorial Note: Manuscripts in emerging areas undergo additional editorial review to ensure methodological rigor and clear ecological relevance. Authors should explicitly connect novel approaches to core mammalian ecology questions.

Article Types & Editorial Priorities

Priority 1: Fast-Track Expedited Review (4-6 weeks)
Priority 2: Standard Regular Review (6-8 weeks)
Rarely Considered By Invitation or Exceptional Merit

Editorial Standards & Requirements

Reporting Guidelines

All manuscripts must adhere to discipline-specific reporting standards:

  • ARRIVE guidelines for animal research
  • STROBE for observational studies
  • PRISMA for systematic reviews
  • STARD for diagnostic accuracy studies

Data & Code Availability

We require transparent research practices:

  • Raw data deposition in public repositories
  • Analysis code sharing (GitHub, Zenodo)
  • Clear documentation of methods
  • Reproducible workflows when applicable

Ethics & Permits

Mandatory documentation for all field research:

  • Institutional animal care committee approval
  • Research permits from relevant authorities
  • Indigenous community consultation (when applicable)
  • Compliance with national and international regulations

Preprint Policy

We support open science practices:

  • Preprints allowed on recognized servers
  • Does not affect consideration for publication
  • Authors must disclose preprint DOI at submission
  • Preprint citation encouraged in final publication

Publication Metrics & Performance

28
Days to First Decision (Median)
42%
Acceptance Rate
65
Days to Publication (After Acceptance)
Open
Access Model (APC Applies)

Ready to Submit Your Research?

If your manuscript focuses on wild mammal populations, ecosystem processes, or conservation applications with rigorous methodology and clear ecological significance, we invite you to submit to Journal of Mammal Research.

Contact Editorial Office