Journal of Ecology News
2007; Wiley; Volume: 96; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01331.x
ISSN1365-2745
AutoresBarney Davies, Michael R. Hutchings, David J. Gibson, Richard D. Bardgett,
Tópico(s)Plant Pathogens and Resistance
ResumoThe ISI® 2006 Impact Factor for Journal of Ecology is 4.239, placing it twelfth in a ranking of 114 ecology journals. After an increase of 26% (3.397 to 4.277) between 2004 and 2005, the Journal has consolidated its strong position. The Immediacy Index, a measure of how much the research published in 2006 is cited within the same year, is 0.752. This compares very well amongst ecology journals, coming thirteenth in the ISI® ranking. Furthermore, the citation half-life of articles is still greater than 10 years. Thus, in addition to the work published in the Journal being cited widely and rapidly by the ecological community, the long half-life attests to the lasting relevance and utility of published studies. Clearly, the performance of the Journal in 2006 confirms that the papers published are among the most influential, rapidly cited and durable research in plant ecology. Moreover, Clements’ (1936) and Watt's (1947) articles are still among the most popular articles from the Journal viewed and printed in 2006 from JSTOR (where all Journal of Ecology articles from 1913 to 2003 are available to subscribers). We are committed to making the Journal as accessible as possible. Printed copies of Journal of Ecology are scheduled to arrive with subscribers at the beginning of the month of publication (January, March, May, July, September and November), while full content of each issue is available online to subscribers approximately one week ahead of print publication on the Wiley-Blackwell Synergy website (http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/loi/jec). In addition, forthcoming articles can be accessed in advance of their assignment to an issue in the ‘Online Early’ pages of Synergy. ‘Online Early’ articles are available to be read as soon as they are ready for publication, rather than having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. While they lack final page numbers and volume/issue details, ‘Online Early’ articles comprise the final version of the paper and are considered fully published. They are therefore available to be downloaded and cited (using their doi number) from the date that they first appear online. Articles published in the Journal are available online via Synergy back to 1998. A noteworthy recent development that we are pleased to announce is that papers published in Journal of Ecology (and in the other three journals published by the British Ecological Society –Journal of Applied Ecology, Journal of Animal Ecology and Functional Ecology) are freely available from Synergy to all from two years after issue publication. Article Summaries are, of course, immediately available to view to all. In addition, authors who wish to do so can pay a fee to make the full article free to all as soon as it is published via Blackwell's ‘OnlineOpen’ service (more details at http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/static/onlineopen.asp). Journal of Ecology publishes key experimental and theoretical research that advances our understanding of all aspects of the ecology of plants in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. In addition to the population and community ecology for which the Journal is well known, we encourage submissions on topics such as biogeochemistry, ecosystems ecology, microbial ecology, physiological plant ecology, climate change, ecogenomics, mycorrhizal ecology, and the interactions between plants and organisms such as animals or bacteria. Increased submission rates mean that the Journal's Editorial team must continue to be very selective in what we publish. Despite publishing a record number of articles (129) in 2007 (cf. 117 in 2006), our current acceptance rate is still only around 20%. The decision to reject is not taken lightly by the Editors. Our aim is to select – and facilitate the eventual publication of – those plant ecology papers that are likely to be, in the Editors’ opinion, of greatest interest to our broad and international audience. Despite ever-increasing numbers of papers submitted for consideration, average time from submission to first decision for the last 12 months is now under 40 days, and average time from final acceptance to Online Early publication on Synergy for 2007 is 42 days. We always aim to treat authors and referees with respect, courtesy and efficiency. Some of the most accessed articles published in the Journal in 2007 are the Craine–Grime–Tilman series of Forum papers which continue the long running debate on primary plant strategy theories (Craine 2007; Grime 2007; Tilman 2007). These papers arose in response to an Essay Review article published by Craine (2005) entitled ‘Reconciling plant strategy theories of Grime and Tilman’. Another recent well-received and widely used Essay Review paper has been ‘An ecologist's guide to ecogenomics’ by Ouborg & Vriezen (2007). Another important component of the Journal is the series of autecological accounts of plant species occurring in Britain, Biological Flora of the British Isles. This series is a separate section of the Journal, published alongside regular articles but with its own Editor, Anthony Davy, and team of Associate Editors. The Biological Flora of the British Isles series began in 1940 and 248 accounts have been published to date (details at http://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/publications/journals/ecology/BiologicalFlora/). In 2007 three new accounts were published: Melampyrum sylvaticum (Dalrymple 2007), Cirsium dissectum (de Vere 2007) and Juniperus communis (Thomas et al. 2007). Articles in this series are free to access immediately upon publication, and all accounts back to 1998 are available on the Synergy website. Many of the species covered are widely distributed and prospective authors from any part of the world with particular knowledge of a species that occurs in Britain are welcome. The series Editor is always pleased to receive new offers to write accounts, and can be contacted at a.davy@uea.ac.uk. A new development in 2007 has been the addition of a final ‘Synthesis’ point to the Summary for all papers published in the Journal. This is intended to emphasize the key findings of the work and its general significance, indicating clearly how the study has advanced ecological understanding and thus hopefully making the importance of the paper more easily apparent to non-specialists. This current issue contains the first two papers in a new series called Future Directions. The aim of this series is to provide an opportunity for authors to outline a provocative new direction for a discipline within plant ecology. These short papers will not review the field – the opportunity to do that currently exists within our Essay Review series. The existing Forum section in the Journal will also remain separate from Future Directions, as it provides a sounding board for different viewpoints and the opportunity to provide critical comment on recently published papers. In contrast, the Future Directions series provides the stage for an author to say: ‘This is where I think the field is going/needs to go’. We envisage that these short papers will establish the direction of the chosen field for the future. Of course, such a view may eventually turn out to be incorrect, but these papers will be designed to make readers think, and to challenge their understanding of the topic. In Future Directions paper No. 1, Pickett et al. (2007) provide a novel approach to incorporating plant ecological knowledge within the disciplines involved in urban design, including architecture, town planning and civil engineering, to develop new applications for the use of plant ecology in cities and to test the effect of urban ecological structure on urban ecosystem functions, while at the same time educating and involving the public. The second Future Directions paper (Moles et al. 2007), also in the current issue, puts forward a framework for understanding and perhaps predicting invasion success of non-native species in plant communities. This framework incorporates biotic and abiotic information to help predict invasion success, especially in situations where environmental conditions have recently changed and invading species may fill the resulting vacant niches. All ecologists with novel ideas that will appeal to a wide readership, and that fit the specifications detailed above, are encouraged to consider submitting their manuscripts under the new Future Directions format. The Editors are always prepared to discuss the suitability of ideas for such papers with potential authors prior to submission. In addition, Journal of Ecology is preparing a Special Feature for publication later in 2008, to be Guest Edited by James Bullock and Ran Nathan, and entitled ‘Plant dispersal across multiple scales: linking models and reality’. Papers will cover experimental and modelling approaches to understanding plant dispersal, including the use and development of mechanistic dispersal models, new ecological or evolutionary models that explicitly include dispersal, and integration of spatial models with field data. Since last year's Journal of Ecology News, the previous Managing Editor, Meran Owen, left and has been replaced by Barney Davies, with whom many of you will already have corresponded. We thank Meran for his efforts with the Journal and wish him well in his new role as Publishing Editor at Springer. During 2007, David Burslem, Peter Moore and Hanna Tuomisto retired as Associate Editors. We are extremely grateful to all of them for their hard work over the years, but should particularly like to thank Peter, who has helped the Journal for more years than our records go back! All of them, together with our current Associate Editors, are vitally important for selecting the highest quality material submitted for publication in the Journal, and for the efficiency with which we handle submissions. During 2007 we have welcomed Jason Fridley (experimental community ecology, scale in community ecology, landscape ecology), Hans Jacquemyn (woodland herbaceous plant ecology, habitat fragmentation, plant conservation), Charlie Canham (forest ecology, competition, neighbourhood effects), Fergus Massey (plant–animal interactions, tropical ecology, statistics), Chris Lortie (community ecology, meta-analyses, seed bank ecology), and Bettina Engelbrecht (plant functional ecology, tropical ecology, plant community composition and ecosystem function) as new appointments to the Board. We also welcome Michael Usher and Chris Preston to the Editorial Board for the Biological Flora of the British Isles series. Journal of Ecology awards the John L Harper Young Investigator's prize annually to the best paper published by a young author at the start of his or her research career. The 2007 Prize is awarded to Raj Whitlock for his paper entitled ‘The role of genotypic diversity in determining grassland community structure under constant environmental conditions’. Raj's PhD was carried out at the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences at the University of Sheffield, and was awarded in 2005. Since completing his PhD he has been involved in research with the UK Population Biology Network (UKPopNet) based, again, at Sheffield. This work involves assessing the effectiveness of protected areas within the UK at conserving species’ genetic diversity and evolutionary potential. In the winning paper, Whitlock et al. (2007) used DNA markers to analyse the relative abundance of genotypes of individual species in experimental grassland communities established five years previously, with different levels of genetic diversity. They found that striking differences have developed in the relative abundances of genotypes within species in the communities, and relative abundance is consistent across communities with different initial levels of genetic diversity. Thus, under the relatively constant conditions to which these experimental communities have been subjected, species abundance patterns were largely predictable from knowledge of the genetic composition of the component species populations. At the same time, a genotype–environment interaction became increasingly influential in determining genotype abundance at the community level as communities became more genetically impoverished. A special mention must go to another young author, Tracy Emiko Condeso for her paper ‘Effects of landscape heterogeneity on the emerging forest disease sudden oak death’ (Condeso & Meentemeyer 2007). Sudden oak death is a destructive fungal disease of particular threat to forests of the west coast of North America. It was shown that pathogen inoculum load was greater in forests with high landscape connectivity and high abundance of host species. As such, their study makes a timely and valuable contribution to our understanding of the epidemiology of sudden oak death and how success of pathogen invasion is related to aspects of the landscape. Indeed, this study garnered wider publicity, highlighting an issue of strong topical import to threatened woodland ecosystems (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/08/070815145316.htm). We hope that Raj Whitlock will be able to take up the British Ecological Society's invitation to attend its Annual Meeting in London in September 2008 to receive his award and to give a presentation of his work. The winner of this prize also receives £250, membership of the BES, and a year's subscription to Journal of Ecology. The revised Journal of Ecology webpages hosted by the BES were launched in July 2007 at http://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/publications/journals/ecology. These new pages now include a regularly updated ‘News and Announcements’ section, and comprehensive guidance notes for Authors and Referees. Furthermore, we now invite all authors of accepted papers to prepare a brief ‘lay summary’ outlining the key findings of their work in a way that is accessible to non-scientists who are interested in ecological or environmental issues. In our continuing efforts to ensure that the research published in the Journal reaches as wide an audience as possible, the lay summaries received for each issue are now available on our new webpages. We hope that users find the updated website easier to navigate, and the new developments found therein to be useful and interesting. Another recent online development for the Journal is our new ‘Editor's Choice’ section (http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/JEC_EdsChoice.pdf). Here, one of the Editors of the Journal previews some of the highlights amongst the papers to be published in each issue. While we recognize that it is somewhat invidious to make an ‘Editor's Choice’ from the large number of high quality submissions that the Journal receives and publishes, we hope that this section will help to highlight those papers that we think may be of particular interest to our broad readership. Mike Hutchings, the Executive Editor, selected two papers from Philip Grime's group in Sheffield that were published in tandem in the September issue of the Journal (Volume 95, Issue 5). Fridley et al. (2007) showed that the outcome of competition between two common grassland species (the grass Koeleria macrantha and the sedge Carex caryophyllea) in the conditions that they most commonly experience (grazed and infertile) depended on their specific genotype. Together with Whitlock et al. (2007), the 2007 John L Harper prize winner, these two studies reveal new and important aspects of the ways in which genetic diversity determines the structure and diversity of grassland plant communities. From the November issue (Volume 95, issue 6), Editor David Gibson highlighted a paper from Carolyn Malmstrom's group at Michigan State University in the USA, entitled ‘Barley yellow dwarf viruses (BYDVs) preserved in herbarium specimens illuminate historical disease ecology of invasive and native grassland species’. In this paper, Malmstrom et al. (2007) employed molecular methods to reveal a previously unexplored role for BYDVs in influencing historical plant community dynamics. Journal of Ecology relies upon the commitment, expertise, and judgement of its referees to maintain the high standard of the research it publishes. At the end of this News item we have listed the names of all of the referees who have completed reports for us between mid-October 2006 and mid-October 2007. The Editors of the Journal very much appreciate their efforts and we sincerely thank them all. We know that acting as a referee for Journal of Ecology entails significant time and effort. We have recently added a ‘Referee Resources’ section to the BES webpages that we hope referees will find useful and will help to make their job as easy as possible (http://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/publications/journals/ecology). 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Appel, Heidi Arens, Paul Arianoutsou, Margarita Arnone, Jay Arseneault, Dominique Artz, Derek Ashley, Mary Asselin, Hugo Augustine, David Austin, Michael Azcarate, Francisco Badano, Ernesto Baer, Sara Balslev, Henrik Baraloto, Christopher Bardgett, Richard Barot, Sébastien Barraclough, Tim Barrat-Segretain, Marie-Helene Barrett, Luke Bascompte, Jordi Bates, Jeff Beaumont, Kieren Bebber, Daniel Beckage, Brian Beechie, Tim Bekker, Renee Belnap, Jayne Bennie, Jonathan Berg, Matty Bever, Jim Bezemer, Martijn Biere, Arjen Bijlsma, R (Kuke) Birks, John Blair, Amy Blair, Brent Blundell, Arthur Bock, Carl Bohan, David Bokhorst, Stef Bolker, Benjamin Bond, William Borum, Jens Bossdorf, Oliver Boutin, C Bowker, Matthew Bradford, Kent Bradford, Mark Breshears, David Briggs, John Brooker, Rob Brown, Joel Brown, Rebecca Bruno, John Bruun, Hans Henrik Brys, Rein Brzosko, Emilia Buckley, Yvonne Bullock, James Burd, Martin Burger, James Burns, Kevin Burton, Andrew Busing, Richard Byers, Jeb Cadotte, Marc Caesar, Anthony Callaway, Ray Canham, Charles Caporn, Simon Cappuccino, Naomi Carcaillet, Christopher Carlo, Tomas Cavieres, Lohengrin Chambers, Jeanne Chapman, Hazel Charalambidou, Iris Chave, Jerome Chazdon, Robin Cheplick, Gregory Cheptou, Pierre-Olivier Cherubini, Paolo Chiarucci, Alessandro Choler, Philippe Clark, James Clay, Keith Cleland, Elsa Cobb, Neil Colautti, Rob Coley, Phyllis Colwell, Robert Comes, Hans-Peter Connolly, John Cook, Garry Cook, William Coomes, David Corlett, Richard Cornwell, William Cortez, Andrés Costa, Flavia Coughenour, Michael Cousens, Roger Couteron, Pierre Crain, Caitlin Craine, Joseph Crawford, Robert Cresswell, James Cronin, G Dale, Mark Dalling, Jim Damgaard, Christian D’Amore, D D’Antonio, Carla Davis, Mark Davy, Anthony De Boeck, Hans De Deyn, Gerlinde De Jong, Tom Delong, Mike Den Nijs, Hans Deng, Jian-Ming Denison, R. Ford Desdevises, Yves D’Hertefeldt, Tina Dickie, Ian Dickson, Timothy Diggins, Thomas Dighton, John Dinnetz, Patrick Doak, Dan Dodd, Mike Dormann, Carsten Dornbush, Mathew Douhovnikoff, Vladimir Dovciak, Martin Duchesne, Louis Dudley, S Dullinger, Stefan During, Heinjo Durka, Walter Duursma, Remko Dyer, Andy Eckenwalder, James Eckstein, Lutz Ehrlen, Johan Ejrnaes, Rasmus Elderd, Bret Elger, Arnaud Emery, Sarah Enriquez, Susana Epstein, Howie Eriksson, Ove Ervin, Gary Fahey, Tim Falster, Daniel Fargione, Joseph Fiala, Brigitte Figuerola, Jordi Fine, Paul Fleming, Rob Flinn, Kathryn Foissner, Wilhelm Fownes, James Franco, Miguel Franklin, Janet Franklin, Scott Franks, Steven Fraser, Lauchlan Frelich, Lee Fridley, Jason Funk, Jennifer Galatowitsch, Susan Galen, C Galloway, L Gange, Alan Garrett, Karen Gedalof, Ze’Ev Gehring, Catherine Gibbs, Adrian Gibson, David Giladi, Itamar Gill, Richard Gilliam, Frank Gillson, Lindsey Girardin, Martin Glitzenstein, Jeff Gomez, Crisanto Gomez, Jose Gomez-Aparicio, Lorena Gornall, Richard Gough, Laura Graae, Bente Grace, Jim Graffelman, Jan Gratzer, Georg Gravel, Dominique Greene, David Griffin, Kevin Groeneveld, Juergen Gross, Nicolas Grotkopp Kuo, Eva Grytnes, John-Arvid Guesewell, Sabine Guichard, Frederic Hamrick, James Hane, Elizabeth Hansen, Everett Hardesty, Britta Harpole, Stan Hay, M E Hector, Andy Helgason, Thorunn Hendricks, Joseph Herben, Tomas Hietz, Peter Hill, Mark Hillebrand, Helmut Hilt, Sabine Hobbhahn, Nina Hobbie, Sarah Hoffmann, William Hogan, Dianna Holdaway, Robert Holzapfel, Claus Hooftman, Danny Horton, Tom Horvitz, Carol Houseman, Gregory Howe, Henry Huber, Heidrun Hughes, Francine Hume, David Huston, Michael Hutchings, Michael Huxman, Travis Ings, Thomas Jacquemyn, Hans Jansen, Patrick Janssen, Arne Jarosz, Andrew Jenkins, Michael Jenkins, Stuart Jensen, Kai John-Chandran, Robert Jones, Robert Jongejans, Eelke Jorgensen, Tove Joshi, Jasmin Jury, Stephen Kadmon, R Karban, R Kardol, Paul Kashian, Dan Kelly, Colleen Kery, Marc Kikvidze, Zaal Kindlmann, Pavel King, David Kingsland, Sharon Kirby, Keith Kitajima, K Klanderud, Kari Kleyer, M Klironomos, John Klotz, Stefan Knapp, Alan Kneeshaw, Daniel Kneitel, Jamie Knight, Tiffany Knox, Kirsten Kobe, R Koenig, Walter Kohn, Linda Kolb, Annette Kollmann, Johannes Koricheva, Julia Kost, Christian Kotanen, Peter Kotar, John Kowalchuk, George Kraft, Nathan Kullman, L Kunstler, Georges Kuyper, Thomas Kwit, Charles Ladd, Brenton Lake, Janice Lamb, Eric Lankinen, Asa Latimer, Andrew Lau, Jennifer Lauenroth, Bill Lavorel, Sandra Law, Richard Leadley, Paul Lehtila, K Leimu, Roosa Leishman, Michelle Leiss, Kirsten Lele, Subhash Lennartsson, Tommy Lenoir, Lisette Leps, Jan Levine, Jonathan Lewis, Owen Liancourt, Pierre Lieberman, Milton Limpens, Juul Lindborg, Regina Linder, Peter Løe, Geir Loik, Michael Loiselle, Bette Lonn, Mikael Lonsdorf, Eric López, Bernat Lowe, Joseph Luckman, Brian Lugo, Ariel Lunau, Klaus Lusk, Chris Maad, Johanne Macdougall, Andrew Machado, Jose Luis Mack, Dick Macmahon, J Maerz, John Malakar, Raksha Malanson, George Mallik, Azim Malmer, Nils Martinez Ramos, Miguel Martorell, Carlos Marvier, Michelle Maskell, Lindsay Matlack, Glenn Matthies, Diethart Mcclain, Craig Mccormick, Melissa Mcculley, Rebecca Mceuen, Amy Mcintire, Eliot Mendez, Marcos Menges, Eric Metcalf, Jessica Michalet, Richard Milbau, Ann Milton, Sue Miriti, Maria Mitchell, Fraser Moles, Angela Mommer, Liesje Montgomery, Rebecca Morecroft, Michael Morgan, Huw Morris, Craig Morris, Dave Morrison, Janet Moutinho, Paulo Mulder, Christian Muller-Landau, Helene Munzbergova, Zuzana Murren, Courtney Muth, Norris Muzika, Rose-Marie Myster, Randall Nagaike, Takuo Nakamura, Masahiro Newbery, D Newton, Paul Nijs, Ivan Nuttle, Tim Obeso, J O'Brien, Eileen Ogawa, Kazuharu Ollerton, Jeff Olofsson, Johan Olsson, P Oostermeijer, Gerard Ozinga, Wim Pagani, Mark Pakeman, Robin Palacio, Sara Palmiotto, Peter Parker, Matthew Parrish, Judy Parsons, A Pärtel, Meelis Pascarella, John Pastor, John Pennings, Steven Peterson, Chris Phoenix, Gareth Pico, F Pither, Jason Plotkin, J Pohnert, Georg Polley, Wayne Poorter, Hendrik Poorter, Lourens Potts, Matthew Pozo, Maria Jose Pregitzer, K Prentice, Colin Price, Mary Pugnaire, Francisco Purves, D Putz, F Quested, Helen Quintana-Ascencio, Pedro Rajaniemi, Tara Raven, John Raventos, Jose Reeves, Gordon Reinhart, Kurt Restrepo, Carla Revilla, Eloy Rey, Pedro Ribbens, E Rice, Kevin Richards, Christina Richardson, Sarah Rico-Gray, V Ricotta, Carlo Rieder, Julie Rietkerk, M Riginos, Corinna Riipi, Marianna Rillig, Matthias Ripple, William Roach, Deborah Roberts, Mark Robertson, Alastair Robledo-Arnuncio, Juan Roderick, Michael Rodríguez De La Vega, Ricardo Roelofs, Jan Rogers, William Rooney, T Ruess, Liliane Russo, Sabrina Rydgren, Knut Rydin, Hakan Sack, Lawren Saikkonen, Kari Sakai, Ann Sakai, Satoki Sakai, Shoko Santamaria, Luis Scarff, Fiona Schamp, Brandon Scheiner, Sam Scheller, Robert Schenk, H Scheublin, Tanja Schimel, Josh Schlichting, Carl Schnitzer, Stefan Schupp, Eugene Schwilk, Dylan Schwinning, Susan Schwintzer, Christa Seastedt, Timothy Seiwa, Kenji Semchenko, Marina Shefferson, Richard Sher, A Shipley, Bill Siemann, Evan Silvertown, Jonathan Simonetti, Javier Sinclair, A Singer, Michael Sipes, Sedonia Smart, Simon Smouse, Peter Sorensen, Jennifer Sork, Victoria Sparrow, Ashley Spehn, Eva Sprent, Janet Stachowicz, Jay Stang, Martina Stanton, Maureen Steadman, Kathryn Stehlik, Ivana Steinger, Thomas Stengel, Dagmar Sterck, Frank Stevens, M Henry Stevenson, Anthony Stinchcombe, John Stinson, Kristina Stoecklin, Juerg Stoyan, Dietrich Stromberg, Caroline Sugiyama, Shu-Ichi Sukopp, Herbert Sumida, Akihiro Suzuki, J Svejcar, Tony Svenning, Jens-Christian Tackenberg, Oliver Tamis, WLM Tanino, K Tanner, Ed Taper, Mark L Telford, Richard Terborgh, John Thomas, Sean Thompson, Ken Tissue, David Toth, Gunilla Totland, O Traveset, Anna Truscott, Anne-Marie Tuininga, Amy Valladares, F Vamosi, Jana Van Dam, N Van De Gevel, Saskia Van De Koppel, Johan Van Der Meijden, Eddy Van Der Putten, Wim Van Der Wal, Rene Van Dijk, Peter Van Groenendael, J Van Kleunen, Mark Van Klinken, Rieks Van Ruijven, Jasper Vandvik, Vigdis Vazquez, Diego Veen, Ciska Veenendaal, Elmar Vellend, Mark Venable, L Verdu, Miguel Vergeer, Philippine Verheyen, Kris Vermeulen, Peter Vesk, Peter Violle, Cyrille Vivanco, Jorge Volder, Astrid Volis, Sergei Vorren, Karl-Dag Vourlitis, George Vrieling, K Wagner, Helene Waite, Steve Walker, Lars Walters, Michele Walton, David Wanek, Wolfgang Wardle, David Waser, Nickolas Webb, Sarah Webster, Christopher Weigelt, Alexandra Weiher, Evan Weiner, Jacob Weis, Arthur Wentworth, T Wesselingh, Renate Whigham, Dennis White, Peter Whitlock, Raj Wiegand, Thorsten Wildova, Radka Wilsey, Brian Wirth, Rainer Woinarski, John Woodin, Sarah Woods, K Worley, A Wright, Ian Wright, Joe Wright, Justin Wyckoff, P Yamamura, Kohji Yanai, Ruth Yee, T Young, Iain Zamora, R Zanne, Amy Zehnder, Caralyn Zhu, Bin
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