Editorial Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Editorial 2025

2024; Wiley; Volume: 34; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/mec.17633

ISSN

1365-294X

Autores

Loren H. Rieseberg, Benjamin Sibbett, Joanna R. Freeland, Angel G. Rivera‐Colón,

Tópico(s)

Species Distribution and Climate Change

Resumo

Molecular Ecology (MEC) remains one of the most influential journals in evolution and ecology. In 2023, the journal published 389 citable items, placing it fourth among 54 journals in Clarivate's Evolutionary Biology category and 11th out of 195 in Ecology. This trend is mirrored in citation counts, with MEC receiving 38,480 citations—ranking fourth in Evolutionary Biology and eighth in Ecology. Other notable metrics include the five-year journal impact factor (5.4), which positions MEC seventh in Evolutionary Biology, and an EigenFactor score of 0.027, ranking fifth in the same category. The EigenFactor reflects the citation frequency of articles published in the last five years. Additionally, Google Scholar's h5-index, which assesses the impact of articles from the past five years, gives MEC an h5-index of 71, placing it fourth among either ecology or evolution journals. While MEC continues to be a hybrid journal, the proportion of citable items that are open access continues to rise, reaching 42% in 2023. Molecular Ecology grew very rapidly during the 1990s, so in 2001 we established subject categories to permit readers to more easily find new papers of interest to them. While additional categories have been added since then, they have not been modified to account for widespread use of genomic tools and resources or for the rise of microbiome and epigenetic research. The updated list of subject categories that authors can choose when submitting an article is provided below: Adaptation and Speciation Analytical methods development Behavioural genomics Community ecology and coevolution Community genomics Conservation genomics Ecological genomics Ecological interactions Epigenomics Environmental nucleic acids (eDNA/eRNA) Evolutionary dynamics of ecologically important genes or QTLs Evolutionary genomics Hybridisation and introgression Impact of genetically modified organisms Indigenous perspectives and methodologies Invasion genomics Landscape genomics Microbial biodiversity Molecular adaptation and environmental genomics Phylogenomics Population genetic theory Population genomics Quantitative genomics Relatedness and kin selection Reproductive strategies Sex allocation In 2016, the FAIR (Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reusability) Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship were published (Wilkinson et al. 2016). These principles continue to guide data producers and publishers regarding best practices for publishing and preserving scientific data. However, the emphasis on greater data sharing creates a concern for Indigenous Peoples who wish to assert greater control over the application and use of Indigenous data and Indigenous knowledge for collective benefit. This has resulted in the development of the CARE principles for Indigenous Data Governance (Collective Benefit, Authority to Control, Responsibility and Ethics; Carroll et al. 2020). There is a tension between the FAIR and CARE principles, especially around open sharing mandates (e.g., data sharing policies, genomic data deposition, etc.). Discussions are underway to provide guidelines for authors, editors and publishers regarding how to implement the CARE principles, and reconcile them with the FAIR guidelines. Molecular Ecology was among the first journals in ecology and evolution to be FAIR compliant (Rieseberg, Vines, and Kane 2010), and we would like to be among the first CARE-compliant journals as well. We have made some steps in this direction via our support for the Nagoya Protocol (Marden et al. 2021) and the use of Biocultural, Traditional Knowledge and Cultural Institution Notices (Liggins, Hudson, and Anderson 2021). The latter are intended to raise the visibility of Indigenous communities within our research systems, encourage collaboration with Indigenous communities, and provide a platform for them to develop methodologies and permissions for biodiversity-related research on indigenous land. Lastly, 'Indigenous perspectives/methodologies' has been added as an area of interest to our aims and scope, and 'Indigenous perspectives' and 'traditional ecological knowledge' have been added to keywords on the MEC/MER websites (Rieseberg et al. 2024). Molecular Ecology supports open research, therefore as a condition for publication, requires that the data supporting the results in the paper will be archived in an appropriate public repository. Authors are required to adhere to the guidelines outlined in this viewpoint article when archiving their data (Jenkins et al. 2023). Upon submission, the journal requires authors to provide all data, metadata and code for review by editors and referees. A data accessibility statement will be required during submission, which clearly outlines where data has been deposited. Authors are encouraged to use Private for Peer Review features, if offered by the repository, for the review process. At acceptance, data must be formally archived and the Data Accessibility Statement completed with permanent links to all data from the manuscript. If authors choose to use the DRYAD data repository, Molecular Ecology will pay the archiving fee. Further information on archiving your data with DRYAD is available during submission. Reasons for possible exemptions to our data policy are outlined in https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9961. Should you wish to receive an exemption, please provide reasoning in your cover letter. Molecular Ecology aims to support both FAIR and CARE principles. These principles will be applied when considering requests for exemption based on Indigenous rights and interests. Software and documentation may be made accessible from a long-term server (e.g., GitHub), however, at least a snapshot of these resources must be posted on Dryad, CRAN, or similar academic/publishing archiving sites, with a link to a long-term server where software development and future releases can be found such that continued access to these resources is ensured. We are pleased to announce that Executive Editor, Dr. Ben Sibbett, has been promoted to co-Editor-in-Chief of Molecular Ecology. Ben has already assumed many of the responsibilities of an Editor-in-Chief, including managing the Editorial Board, assigning manuscripts to subject editors, making final decisions on manuscripts, and helping to guide journal policies and scientific direction. He has effectively handled these many tasks, while also demonstrating a keen eye for scientific quality. Ben will share the Editor-in-Chief role with Loren Rieseberg, the current Editor-in-Chief. We also regret to report that senior editor, Pierre Taberlet, has decided to retire from the journal. Pierre has been one of the journal's most distinguished and longest-serving editors (25 years!). In addition to editing regular manuscripts, Pierre served as reviews editor from 2019 to 2021. He also organised several influential special issues that brought new topics to the journal. These include a Special Issue on Environmental DNA in 2012 that provided an overview of this rapidly expanding research area, as well as a follow-up Special Issue in 2021, that described the application of environmental DNA to biomonitoring. Pierre has published extensively in Molecular Ecology over the years, and he is the journal's all-time most highly cited author! In 2007, he won the Molecular Ecology Prize for his pioneering contributions to the field. We thank Pierre for both his outstanding service to Molecular Ecology and for publishing many of his scientific discoveries in the journal. MEC and MER continued to have a robust social media presence in 2024. The official X (formerly Twitter) account, @molecology, now has nearly 7900 followers, an increase of nearly 500 followers when compared to the previous year. As of November 2024, the account made 164 tweets (including retweets and replies) in 2024, averaging over three posts per week. Of these, 38 tweets were made in collaboration with authors following acceptance and publication of their manuscripts in MEC or MER. While the overall level of engagement in the platform has decreased—the likely result of a multi-year trend reflecting changes in the social media landscape among academics—posts made by the official X account still amassed over 360 retweets and 900 likes during the year, averaging over 7 and 18 retweets and likes per post, respectively. Moreover, following an ongoing initiative started last year, social media posts made by the official X account this year continued to include a tag to the official Wiley Ecology and Evolution account (@WileyEcolEvol). This initiative broadens the audience of the posts made by our official account by including the larger ecology and evolution community, beyond readers and followers of MEC and MER. In 2025, we will continue collaborating with our community to find new avenues to impact and serve our audience. In the face of a shifting social media landscape, our goal is to continue being a reliable and direct source of information both about the work published at MEC and MER, and the molecular ecology community as a whole. The 2024 Molecular Ecology Prize has been awarded to Professor Michael Whitlock, Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. Professor Whitlock is a world authority on the role of spatial population structure in evolutionary biology and population genetics. He derived basic population genetic results for spatially structured populations, including the effective population size, rate of evolution due to selection, probability of fixation of beneficial and deleterious alleles, mutation load and inbreeding depression. These results added a ubiquitous, but mainly ignored aspect of real biology to population genetics, that is, spatial population structure. He also established the pervasive influence of non-equilibrium processes in genetic spatial structure, demonstrated important limitations of widely used models for statistical genetics inference, derived the first proper statistical treatment of QST, and identified many sources of potential bias in genomic methods for detecting loci underlying local adaptation. This work has had lasting impacts on numerous topics of interest to molecular ecologists, ranging from landscape genomics to conservation genetics to speciation. Whitlock has further contributed to the field through exceptional service, including writing a leading text on statistical methods, serving as President of the American Society of Naturalists, and establishing a data archiving policy at the major publications in his field, including Molecular Ecology. The Molecular Ecology Prize Committee was comprised of Rowan Barrett (chair), Kay Hodgins, David Lowry, Uma Ramakrishnan and Marta Szulkin. The Harry Smith Prize recognises the best paper published in Molecular Ecology or Molecular Ecology Resources in the previous year by graduate students or early career scholars with no more than five years of postdoctoral or fellowship experience. The prize is named after Professor Harry Smith FRS, who founded the journal and served as both its Chief and Managing Editor during the journal's critical early years. He continued as the journal's Managing Editor until 2008, and went out of his way to encourage early career scholars. The 2024 Harry Smith Prize was awarded to Robert Masaki Hechler from The University of Toronto, Canada. The committee, composed of JEB members Jana Wold, Angel Rivera-Colon and Arne Jacobs, chose Robert's work out of 10 nominations. Robert's paper, titled 'Environmental Transcriptomics Under Heat Stress: Can Environmental RNA Reveal Changes in Gene Expression of Aquatic Organisms?', was published as a 'From the Cover' article and illustrates how environmental RNA (eRNA) can be used to identify changes in gene expression in response to environmental stressors (Hechler et al. 2023). While numerous studies have utilised environmental DNA to explore species composition and distribution, the application of eRNA has received significantly less attention. In his research, Robert examined gene expression changes in Daphnia subjected to heat stress and control conditions within a common garden setup. His findings revealed that eRNA collected from tanks exhibited similar patterns of gene expression changes as RNA extracted from Daphnia tissue. To our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating that eRNA can effectively detect the molecular responses of macroorganisms to environmental stress, paving the way for further research in this area. Additionally, the committee recognised Aurora García-Berro from the Botanical Institute of Barcelona (CSIC) for her outstanding paper, 'Migratory Behaviour is Positively Associated with Genetic Diversity in Butterflies' (García-Berro et al. 2023), which was selected as the runner-up for the Harry Smith Prize. This study analysed the whole genomes of 97 Lepidoptera species with varying migratory strategies, revealing that migratory species possess significantly higher levels of genetic diversity compared to their non-migratory counterparts. Our invited reviews continue to provide valuable, up-to-date information on a range of topics. We greatly appreciate the time and effort provided by the authors who contributed to these syntheses by summarising existing knowledge, identifying knowledge gaps, and providing guidance for future research. In 2024, we published six invited reviews on a range of diverse topics covering cross-ploidy hybridisation, phenotypic influences of structural variants, adaptive evolution of skin colour, neotropical phylogeography, genetic rescue and adaptive radiation. The authors of these reviews each brought novel perspectives to important topics and highlighted the recent insights that have come from increasingly complex and informative genetic data sets. Suggestions for review topics are always welcome; please contact the reviews editor ([email protected]) if you have ideas for future reviews. This year, we also introduced a new category: Mini Reviews. These are informative, shorter reviews that summarise emerging topics, describe novel applications of existing methodologies, or present innovative hypotheses that could frame future research questions. Mini Reviews can also provide a forum for elaborating on a particular process or a complex definition, for example, with the goal of standardising terms or ideas that span multiple subdisciplines. If you have expertise in a concept or process about which you are often asked, please consider turning some of your answers into a Mini Review! We are excited to report that we already have several Mini Reviews in progress, and look forward to further submissions, enquiries and suggestions on what we believe will become a valuable new resource. Molecular Ecology also publishes special issues, which offer a means for showcasing emerging areas of molecular ecology and/or fast-moving research areas. In May of last year (MEC 33:10), we published a special issue titled 'Rapid Evolutionary Adaptation: Potential and Constraint'. While evolution has sometimes been viewed as a slow process, requiring thousands or millions of year to achieve significant genetic change, it is now clear that such change can occur on human-observable timescales, especially when driven by natural selection. Some of the strongest evidence comes from observing phenotypic and genotypic changes in response to human activities, and papers that document evolution in action are frequently published in Molecular Ecology (e.g., Kardum Hjort et al. 2024; Goebl et al. 2024). However, why evolution proceeds rapidly in some cases, but not in others can be puzzling. This is the issue that motivated the Rapid Evolutionary Adaptation special issue, which not only provided abundant phenotypic and genomic evidence of rapid evolutionary change, but also reported on some of the factors that promote rapid evolutionary change or that slow it down (Tellier et al. 2024). A second special issue, 'Evolutionary impact of chromosomal rearrangements' will be published in the last issue of 2024 (MEC 33:24). The role of chromosomal rearrangements in adaptation and speciation has long been controversial, in part because rearrangements often reduce fitness when heterozygous. This led to a several decades-long debate over how they could become established in natural populations (Rieseberg 2001). Thankfully, recent theoretical studies have largely resolved these concerns (Kirkpatrick and Barton 2006; Connallon and Olito 2022), and evolutionary genomic studies have shown that chromosomal rearrangements are important drivers of adaptation and speciation in many plant and animal groups (Fuller et al. 2019; Todesco et al. 2020). However, much of this work has focused on chromosomal inversions, with less attention paid to other kinds of rearrangements (e.g., translocations, fissions/fusions and large indels) that are frequently reported. This special issue fills this gap by offering a genomic update on the evolutionary role of different types of chromosomal rearrangements across the tree of life (Augustijnen et al. 2024). Several other special issues are underway, including 'The Ecology of Gene Expression', 'Conservation Genomics–making a difference', 'Domestication Genomics' and 'Genomics of Speciation'. Special issues are open to all interested authors via calls on the MolecularEcology blog, Spotlight (https://molecularecologyblog.com) and via the journal's Twitter account (@molecol). Please contact co-Editor-in-Chief Ben Sibbett if you are interested in developing a Special Issue. We thank the large number of individuals who have contributed to the field of molecular ecology as readers, authors, reviewers and editors, and we welcome suggestions on how to improve the journal. The following list contains people who reviewed articles for Molecular Ecology between 1 October 2023 and 30 September 2024. Aalto, Sanni-Leea Abellán, Pedro Abrego, Nerea Adams, Clare I. M Adams, Jonathan Agashe, Deepa Aguilar, Pablo Aguillon, Stepfanie Ahn, Seung-Joon Ahrens, Dirk Albaina, Aitor Alberoni, Daniele Allen, Benjamin Allen, Michael Allen, Natalie Allendorf, Fred Alvarez-Manjarrez, Julieta Amezian, Dries Amills, Marcel Anderson, Bruce Andersson, Leif Andrello, Marco Andreou, Demetra Andrew, Samuel Anslan, Sten Antunes, Bernardo Antunes, Diogo Araki, Hitoshi Aranda Lastra, Manuel Araneda, Cristian Arcese, Peter Argueta-Guzman, Magda Arjona, Yurena Armstrong, Ellie Arntzen, Jan W Astudillo-Clavijo, Viviana Audzijonyte, Asta Babik, Wieslaw Backstrom, Niclas Baduel, Pierre Baetscher, Diana Baez-Ortega, Adrian Bahram, Mohammad Baier, Felix Balao, Francisco Balart-García, Pau Ball, Eldon Ballinger, Mallory Ballinger, Matthew Banks, Sam Banovich, Nicholas Barbato, Mario Barbosa, Soraia Bard, Nicholas Barghi, Neda Barkdull, Megan Barker, Brittany Barley, Anthony Barluenga, Marta Barnes, Elle Barreto, Felipe Barrett, Craig Barrett, Russell Barrote, Isabel Barrows, Cameron Barry, Pierre Barth, Julia Bass, Chris Batalha-Filho, Henrique Battlay, Paul Baumel, Alex Baums, Iliana Bay, Rachael Bazzicalupo, Anna Becker, Daniel Beckman, Elizabeth Beever, Erik Beheregaray, Luciano Beichman, Annabel Beier, Sara Bekkevold, Dorte Beldade, Patricia Beldade, Ricardo Ben-Shlomo, Rachel Benham, Phred Bennett, Kevin Berasategui Lopez, Aileen Berdan, Emma Bernardi, Giacomo Bernos, Thaïs Bernstein, Justin Berrios, Louis Berthrong, Sean Bertola, Laura Bertrand, Joris Besnard, Guillaume Besnier, francois Bidartondo, Martin Bieker, Vanessa Bierne, Nicolas Bik, Holly Billerman, Shawn Birkeland, Siri Bisang, Irene Bishop, Anusha Bissett, Andrew Bitter, Mark Bitter Blair, Mary Blanco, Jose Luis Blom, Mozes Boardman, Leigh Bock, Dan Bohutínská, Magdalena Boisseaux, Marion BOIXEL, Anne-Lise Bolstad, Geir H Bolte, Constance Boman, Jesper Bombarely, Aureliano Bonett, Ronald Bono, Jeremy Booker, Tom Borrell, James Botha, Anna-Maria BOUBLI, Jean Philippe Boudry, Pierre Boulding, Elizabeth Bourgeois, Yann Bourke, Andrew Boyko, Adam Boynton, Primrose Bradley, Dan Braga, Lucas Bragg, Morgan Brahma, Anindita Brandvain, Yaniv Brauer, Chris Brennan, Reid Bresnahan, Sean Brinker, Pina Brock, Kinsey Brunetti, Andrés Brüniche-Olsen, Anna Buck, Ryan Bueno, Erika Buglione, Maria Bull, James Burgess, Brock Burri, Reto Burzyński, Artur Busby, Posy Butler, Caleb Butler, Cole Butler, Jakob B Butlin, Roger Byerly, Paige Byrne, Margaret Caballero, Armando Cabanne, Gustavo Cabezas-Cruz, Alejandro Cai, Haoran Calderón-Sanou, Irene Campbell, Polly Campos, Laura V Canal, Drielli Caparroz, Renato Capblancq, Thibaut Carbeck, Katherine Carleton, Karen Carotenuto, Ylenia Carranco, Ana Carvalho, Daniel Carver, Scott Cassin Sacket, Loren Castillo Vardaro, Jessica Catchen, Julian Caterino, Michael Cauz dos Santos, Luiz Cavallero, Serena Celorio-Mancera, Maria de la Paz Cerretti, Pierfilippo Chagnon, Pierre-Luc Chan, Kin Onn Chang, Ying Chano, Víctor Chapuisat, Michel Charlesworth, Deborah Chase, Madeline Che, Jing Cheek, Rebecca Chen, Bing Chen, Dima Chen, Hong-Hwa Chen, Jinming Chen, Senyu Chen, Yiwen Chen, Yolanda Chintalapati, Manjusha Choi, Jae Young Chouvenc, Thomas Chrismas, Nathan Christe, Philippe Christie, Mark Chust, Guillem Chybicki, Igor Civetta, Alberto Clark, Dave Clark, Dave R Clark, Melody Clark, Nicholas Cobos, Marlon Cogni, Rodrigo Colautii, Rob Colgan, Thomas Comeault, Aaron A Comes, Hans Peter Cooley, Arielle Cooper, Steve Corby-Harris, Vanessa Cordonnier, Marion Corl, Ammon Cortês, Marina Cortesi, Fabio Coscia, Ilaria Cosme, Luciano Côte, Jessica Coughlan, Jenn Cragg, Simon Creer, Simon Crisp, Peter Crits-Christoph, Alex Cronk, Quentin Crossman, Carla CUBRY, Philippe Cuellar-Gempeler, Catalina Cuff, Jordan Cui, Rongfeng Cullingham, Catherine Currat, Mathias Da Silva, Jessica Da Silva, Luis Dahan-Moss, Yael Dallaire, Xavier Dalziel, Anne Dapper, Amy Darragh, Kathy Dauphin, Benjamin Davis, Kathryn De Carvalho, Clarissa De Cauwer, Isabelle De Greef, Evelien De Guttry, Christian De Jong, Menno De Kort, Hanne De la Cruz Arguello, Ivan Mijail De la Rua, Pilar Dearing, M. Denise DeBiasse, Melissa DeBose, James Debray, Reena Delord, Chrystelle Denton, Robert Dermauw, Wannes Des Marais, David L DeSaix, Matthew Deschamps, Philippe Dick, Christopher Dickel, Lisa Dicks, Kara Diez-Méndez, David Dimond, James Dimos, Bradford Dixon, Brian Dobata, Shigeto Dobler, Susanne Dobson, Adam Dolby, Greer Donati, Giuseppe Dong, Ke Dorken, Marcel Doublet, Vincent Doums, claudie Dowling, Thomas Du Plessis, Sarah Duan, Tianlin Duarri-Redondo, Sara DuBois, Katie Dudaniec, Rachael Duffy, Karl Dumont, Beth Dunn, Peter Duntsch, Laura Dupuis, Julian Dussex, Nicolas Dutoit, Ludovic Eastwood, Justin Eaton, Katherine Eldon, Bjarki Ellison, Amy Ellison, Shelby Engl, Tobias Erwin, Patrick Escoda, Lídia Escudero, Marcial Estoup, Arnaud Euclide, Peter Evans, Ben Everman, Elizabeth Fais, Maria Fan, Pengfei Fang, Bohao Farrand, Zachery Faust, Ellika Fay, Justin C Feau, Nicolas Feldmeyer, Barbara Feng, Kai Ferchaud, Anne-Laure Ferguson, Laura Fernandes, Kristen Fernández, Pol Ferreira da Silva, Maria ffrench-Constant, Richard Fieldsend, Tommy Fierer, Noah Fifer, James Figueiró, Henrique Fijarczyk, Anna Fischer, Eva Fišer, Cene Flanagan, Ben Flanagan, Sarah Flores-Rentería, Lluvia Fonseca, Vera Fontaine, Samantha Fordyce, James Forester, Brenna Forister, Matthew Formenti, Ludovico Forsdick, Natalie Fouquet, Antoine Fracassetti, Marco Franchini, Paolo Frapin, Morgane Frasier, Timothy Frédérich, Bruno Frederickson, Megan Freedman, Micah Friedlander, Marc Friesen, Christopher Fromm, Bastian Fukuda, Yusuke Fulgione, Domenico Gagne, Roderick Gaigher, Arnaud Gaitán-Espitia, Juan Diego Gajski, Domagoj Gamble, Tony Garces, Kylea Garcia-Souto, Daniel Garcia, Karina Gargiulo, Roberta Garroway, Colin Gaughran, Stephen Ge, Yuan Geffen, Eli Gehring, Catherine Genner, Martin Genty, Gabrielle Georgieva, Simona Geraldes, Armando Gerchen, Jorn Giakoumis, Melina Gibbs, Allen Gibbs, H. Lisle Giglio, Anita Gignoux-Wolfsohn, Sarah Gladieux, Pierre Gleason, L. U Gloria-Soria, Andrea Gloss, Andrew Godsoe, Will Gómez Quijano, María José Gompert, Zachariah Goncalves-Carneiro, Daniel Gonzalez-Pech, Raul González-Tokman, Daniel Goodisman, Michael Gori, Kevin Goulet, Tamar Graciá, Eva Graham, Allie Granger de Boissel, Philippine Grant, Taran Grenier, Eric Grente, Oksana Gressel, Jonathan Grieneisen, Laura Griffiths, Joanna Grivet, Delphine Gross, Briana Gross, Joshua Grummer, Jared Grupstra, Carsten Gschwend, Florian Gugerli, Felix Guillaume, Frédéric Guillemin, Marie-Laure Guillory, Wilson Guo, Ximing Guo, Yalong Guo, Zixiao Gutiérrez, Ricardo Guzman, Aidee Hague, Michael Hale, Matthew Hallerman, Eric Hämälä, Tuomas Hamilton, Chris Han, Kwi Young Han, Shun Hansen, Søren Hanus, Robert Haque, Taslima Harasti, David Harder, Avril Härer, Andreas Harringmeyer, Olivia Harris, Mariana Harrison, Xavier Harrisson, Katherine Hartmann, Fanny Hassanin, Alexandre Hasselmann, Martin Hayward, Angela He, Xiaoping He, Zhili He, Ziwen Hegarty, Matthew Helfer, Gisela Hemmer-Hansen, Jakob Hemstrom, William Hénault, Mathieu Henriques, Romina Hernandez, Alejandra Hernández, Fernando Herrera, Nathanael Hess, Jon Heuertz, Myriam Hewett, Anna Hibbins, Mark Hippee, Alaine Hoang, Kim Hoelzel, Rus Hoenig, Brandon Hofmann, Hans Hofmeister, Natalie Hofreiter, Michael Hogg, Carolyn Höglund, Jacob Hojsgaard, Diego Hernan Holliday, Jason Hong, Xiao-Yue Hooper, Daniel Hörandl, Elvira Hoyt, Joseph Hu, Anyi Hu, Juntao Hu, Yang Hu, Zi-Min Huang, Kaichi Huang, Xi Hudson, Cameron Hudson, Matthew Hughey, Myra Huisman, Jisca Hulcr, Jiri Hulten, van, Dennis Humbert, Jean-François Hunt, Brendan Hunt, Dana Hunter, Molly Hurst, Gregory Ibarbarlz, Federico Imaizumi, Toshiyuki Ingvarsson, Pär Innes, Peter Irwin, Darren Jablonski, Nina Jahner, Joshua Jaimes Nino, Luisa Maria James, Maddie Jan, Kinlan Jansson, Eeva Jardine, Timothy Javůrková, Veronika Jaworski, Coline Jeffries, Ken Jensen, Evelyn Jeon, Jong Yoon Jervis, Phillip Ji, Mukan Ji, Ting Jiang, Zhiyong Jiao, Hengwu Jiao, Shuo Jiao, Yuannian Jimeno, Blanca Johannesson, Kerstin Johnson, Rachel Johnson, Stephen Johnston, Susan Johri, Parul Jones, Beryl Jønsson, Knud Jordano, Pedro Jorde, Per Erik Joseph, Leo Josephs, Emily Junger, Pedro Jusino, Michelle Kadereit, Joachim Kalous, Lukas Kang, Jingliang Kantar, Michael Benjamin Kärkkäinen, Tiia Karrenberg, Sophie Kattenberg, Johanna Kaufmann, Joshka Kawecki, Tadeusz Keagy, Jason Kearns, Anna Keller, Abigail Keller, Alexander Kemenesi, Gábor Kennedy, Peter Kennedy, Susan Kess, Tony Khachaturyan, Marina Khadempour, Lily Khan, Gulzar Khemakhem, Maha Mezghani Kho, James Khota, Yoshida Kim, Eunsoo King, Elizabeth Kirschner, Philipp Kishida, Takushi Kitano, Jun Kjellberg, Finn Kliebenstein, Daniel Klungland, Arne Knutie, Sarah Koepfli, Klaus-Peter Kofler, Robert Kolář, Filip Kolarikova, Zuzana Kõljalg, Urmas Konečný, Adam Koontz, Austin Koop, Jennifer A. H Kopania, Emily Korb, Judith Kornilios, Panagiotis Kosoy, Michael Kosznik-Kwasnicka, Katarzyna Kotsakiozi, Panayiota Kozakiewicz, Christopher Kreiner, Julia Kreisinger, Jakub Kristensen, Torsten Krueger-Hadfield, Stacy Kuelheim, Carsten Kuntner, Matjaz Kuo, Wen-Hsi Kushwaha, Priyanka Kvist, Laura Kyle, Christopher Kyriazis, Christopher Labbé, Frederic LaJeunesse, Todd Lamb, Keric Landis, Jacob Larson, Erica Larson, Wes Láruson, Áki Jarl Lasky, Jesse Lau, Sally Laubach, Zachary Lauterbur, M. Elise Lavery, Shane Lavretsky, Philip Layton, Kara Lazzaro, Brian Le Luyer, Jeremy Le Moan, Alan Lea, Amanda J Leal, Laura C Leder, Erica Lee, Heather Lee, Soo-Rang Legras, Jean-Luc Lehnert, Sarah Leroy, Thibault Leung, Christelle Levis, Nicholas Lewin, Thomas D Li, Chenghua Li, Huan Li, Jingdi Li, Sheng Liang, Yuting Liberti, Joanito Lidén, Kerstin Lim-Hing, Simone Limborg, Morten Lin, Yaping Linck, Ethan Linck, Ethan B Ling, Fangqiong Linnen, Catherine Lipton, Suzanne Liu, Feng Liu, Guanhong Liu, Shao-Lun Liu, Wen Llaurens, Violaine Lo, Nathan Lohse, Konrad Long, Anthony Long, Zhiqin Longino, John López-Nandam, Elora Lopez, Mark Louie Lord, Edana Lostroh, Phoebe Lou, Nicolas Lovas-Kiss, Adam Lowry, David Lozier, Jeff Lucek, Kay Lugo Ramos, Juan Sebastian Lukhtanov, Vladimir Luna, Leilton Lundsgaard, Niclas Lyko, Frank Lynch, Jonathan Lytras, Spyros Ma, Weihua Mable, Barbara Mabry, Mackenzie Macaya-Sanz, David MacDonald, Stuart MacDonald, Zachary MacGuigan, Daniel Macias Munoz, Aide Mack, Katya Maclean, Heidi Majoris, John Majure, Lucas Malacrinò, Antonino Malard, Lucie Malinsky, Milan Mallard, Francois Mallet, James Mallott, Elizabeth Manahan, Donal Mandeville, Elizabeth Manfredini, Fabio Manthey, Joseph Mao, Jianfeng Mao, Kangshan Mao, Yafei Mardulyn, Patrick Marec, Františec Mariani, Stefano Marques, Cristiana Marques, David Marshall, Hollie Marsit, Souhir Martin, Lindsay Mas-Carrió, Eduard Masneuf-Pomarede, Isabelle Massello, Francisco L Mathur, Samarth Matos-Maraví, Pável Matson, Kevin D Mayer, Treana Maynou, Francesc McAssey, Edward McCraney, William McCulloch, Graham McDevitt, Allan McFrederick, Quinn McGaughran, Angela McGowen, Michael McKinney, Garrett Mead, Alayna Measey, John Mee, Jonathan Meger, Joanna Meisel, Richard Melville, Dominik Meng, Fanwei Mergeay, Joachim Merges, Dominik Mérot, Claire Merten Cruz, Marcelo Meserve, Peter Metzger, Brian Meyer, Diogo Michaelides, Sozos Mideros, Santiago Miller, Allison Miller, Joshua.M Miller, Thomas Milligan-McClellan, Kat Minamoto, Toshifumi Mistrick, Janine Mitchell, Kieren Mod, Heidi Modern, Sam Moeller, Andrew H Moll, Julia Monaghan, Pat Moncrieff, Andre Montarry, Josselin Moore, Jean-Sébastien Morales, Hernan Morell Miranda, Pedro Moreno-Letelier, Alejandra Morita, Masaya Morrell, Peter Morris, Andrew Mueller, Sarah Mularo, Andrew Muletz-Wolz, Carly Müller, Niels Muñoz-Valencia, Vanessa Muratore, Isabella Murren, C Murria, Cesc Musilova, Zuzana Musseau, Camille Mussmann, Steven Nabutan

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