东北林业大学二级教授。2007年博士毕业于东北林业大学野生动植物保护与利用专业,2019年获得国家重大人才工程计划资助。现任国家林业和草原局猫科动物研究中心常务主任、中国林业学会自然保护地与生物多样性分会秘书长、Wildlife Research 副主编。主要研究领域涉及生态、景观、营养、行为、遗传和气候变化等方向的濒危野生动物种群和群落动态与管理研究,以及野生动物与人类的共存研究。累计发表学术论文107篇,学术专著2部。
We recognize that re-formatting a manuscript requires work, and that some manuscripts have been submitted to and declined for publication in another journal. Because of this, Wildlife Letters offers Free Format submission where the article can remain in the format for another journal, providing it meets the Aims (above) of one of the article types for Wildlife Letters. In the absence of preexisting formatting, authors should follow the guidelines for formatting described below.
Letter articles give concise reports of new research findings or conceptual analyses that make a significant contribution to knowledge in wildlife science. These are original research articles and contain substantial new findings that are not published elsewhere. The research should contribute either to sustainable wildlife management or conservation, or to understanding and responding to current and emerging challenges to wildlife from global and anthropogenic change. Wildlife science includes diverse topics within ecology and evolution of wildlife species (e.g., genetics, landscape ecology, behavior, ecophysiology), effects of wildlife on ecological systems (e.g., food webs, ecosystems), and more interdisciplinary topics such as from social sciences, economics or anthropology, and can be empirical or theoretical. Letter articles can contain a maximum of 5000 words and 6 figures, tables or text boxes.
Method papers describe new methods or applications of new technology, provide comparison with existing methods of relevance, and demonstrate that the method can produce new findings in wildlife science. Methods include survey methods, descriptions of new technologies or applications of new technologies to wildlife science. We could imagine a wide range of such technologies, including camera trapping methods, unmanned aerial vehicles for remote sensing, molecular methods, use of artificial intelligence, and individual tracking and monitoring technologies. We encourage papers describing survey methods or protocols with the aim of surveying presence/absence or abundance of wildlife species. Papers should contain Introduction and Discussion sections, but beyond this, other sections are free for the author to decide. They may contain up to 5000 words and 6 figures, tables, or text boxes.
Review articles contain empirical, theoretical, or conceptual syntheses that address substantial questions or hypotheses in wildlife science. Reviews containing meta-analyses or other quantitative analyses are encouraged. Reviews need to be structured around major questions or hypotheses in wildlife science and contain new findings based on the analyses that they contain. They can contain a maximum of 7500 words and 10 figures, tables or text boxes.
Concept Analysis articles describe a new concept, theory or framework with broad relevance to wildlife science. Concept articles are required to demonstrate the ability of the concept to contribute in substantial ways to wildlife science. The concept, theory or framework should be of broad interest in wildlife science and these articles will usually require a quantitative analysis to demonstrate the value of the new concept, theory, or framework. They can contain a maximum of 5000 words and 6 figures, tables, or text boxes.