《Journal Of Agronomy And Crop Science》是一本以Multi-Language為主的未開放獲取國際優(yōu)秀期刊,中文名稱農學與作物科學雜志,本刊主要出版、報道農林科學-AGRONOMY領域的研究動態(tài)以及在該領域取得的各方面的經(jīng)驗和科研成果,介紹該領域有關本專業(yè)的最新進展,探討行業(yè)發(fā)展的思路和方法,以促進學術信息交流,提高行業(yè)發(fā)展。該刊已被國際權威數(shù)據(jù)庫SCIE收錄,為該領域相關學科的發(fā)展起到了良好的推動作用,也得到了本專業(yè)人員的廣泛認可。該刊最新影響因子為3.7,最新CiteScore 指數(shù)為8.2。
本刊近期中國學者發(fā)表的論文主要有:
Soil drought duration and severity affect cotton boll biomass by altering recovery times and carbon dynamics of subtending leaf
Effects of nitrogen and water stress on the rehydration, endogenous hormonal regulation and yield of maize
Author: Chi, Yu Xin; Ahmad, Shakeel; Yang, Ke Jun; Fu, Jian; Yang, Li; Zhou, Xun Bo; Zhu, Hong De
Development of an irrigation regime for winter wheat to save water resources by avoiding irrigation at anthesis stage
Author: Wu, Baojian; Lin, Xiang; Ali, Muhammad Fraz; Wang, Dong
英文介紹
Journal Of Agronomy And Crop Science雜志英文介紹
The effects of stress on crop production of agricultural cultivated plants will grow to paramount importance in the 21st century, and the Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science aims to assist in understanding these challenges. In this context, stress refers to extreme conditions under which crops and forages grow. The journal publishes original papers and reviews on the general and special science of abiotic plant stress. Specific topics include: drought, including water-use efficiency, such as salinity, alkaline and acidic stress, extreme temperatures since heat, cold and chilling stress limit the cultivation of crops, flooding and oxidative stress, and means of restricting them. Special attention is on research which have the topic of narrowing the yield gap. The Journal will give preference to field research and studies on plant stress highlighting these subsections. Particular regard is given to application-oriented basic research and applied research. The application of the scientific principles of agricultural crop experimentation is an essential prerequisite for the publication. Studies based on field experiments must show that they have been repeated (at least three times) on the same organism or have been conducted on several different varieties.