

“I am really pleased to see that is becoming the journal of choice for shorter more or less classical taxonomic work.

Subscribers include professionals and keen amateurs, students, teachers, gardeners, researchers, field botanists, academic institutions, libraries, museums, nature centers, botanic gardens, arboreta, and various government agencies. The readers of Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas and our Botanical Miscellany include those with an interest in botany, classical and modern taxonomy, horticulture, and plant ecology. Texas, please review the scope and aims of the journal and guidelines for authors here. If interested in submitting a manuscript to J. Visit /jbrit for access and instructions to setup access. Please designate your subscription preference for print, online, or both. For 2020 only, your subscription will include an introductory and complimentary online access to upcoming issues 14(1 & 2) and back issues 13(1 & 2) and 12 (1 & 2). We are pleased to announce an online access option starting with JBRIT 14(1). (SCOPUS) Index to American Botanical Literature. Texas is that it is indexed and abstracted in print and/or electronic form by the following: AGRICOLA Database (National Agricultural Library) Applied Botany Abstracts Biosciences Information Service of Biological Abstracts (BIOSIS) Current Awareness in Biological Sciences (CABS) ISI Thomson The Kew Record of Taxonomic Literature Natural Products Alert (NAPRALERT) Referativnyi Zhurnal (Abstracts Journal of the Institute of Scientific Information of the Republic of Russia) and SCImago Journal & Country Rank, Elsevier B.V.

#TEXAS JOURNALY 2 FULL#
All papers are peer-reviewed and are frequently illustrated with maps, line drawings, and full color photographs. Abstracts in additional languages, especially those of the area in which the research was conducted, are encouraged. Papers appear in English or Spanish, with abstracts in both languages. Texas currently has subscriptions on a worldwide basis approximately 40% are foreign (about 35 countries) and 60% are domestic (USA).Įach issue contains articles on various groups of plants such as palms, ferns, lilies, irises, legumes, primroses, morning-glories, bromeliads, four-o’clocks, daisies, buttercups, roses, agaves, mustards, cacti, orchids, mints, wildflowers, and herbs. Texas is published twice a year, usually with 250-350 pages per issue.

Coverage is global: it is not restricted to any geographical area, and papers have been contributed from around the world. The journal publishes primary research papers in English and Spanish in fields such as anatomy, biogeography, chemotaxonomy, ecology, evolution, floristics, genetics, paleobotany, palynology, and phylogenetic systematics. Texas(formerly Sida, Contributions to Botany (“SCB”)) has been a source of current research in classical and modern systematic botany for readers throughout the world for 59 years.
