---
name: nature-ecology-and-evolution
description: Use when targeting Nature Ecology & Evolution (Nat Ecol Evol) or deciding whether an ecology or evolutionary biology manuscript fits this venue. Encodes the journal's fit, framing, method-and-evidence bar, house style, official-submission re-check, and desk-reject heuristics.
---

# Nature Ecology & Evolution (nature-ecology-and-evolution)

## Journal positioning

Nature Ecology & Evolution is Springer Nature's primary specialist journal for research across the full breadth of ecology and evolutionary biology, from molecular evolution and phylogenetics through population biology, community ecology, macroecology, and global biodiversity dynamics. The journal targets conceptual advances that reshape how the field understands ecological or evolutionary processes — not incremental empirical additions to a well-established paradigm. Its readership spans evolutionary biologists, ecologists, conservation scientists, and palaeobiologists; a paper must be legible and significant beyond its focal system or taxonomic group. This skill is a **fit / venue-selection / re-framing** tool. It does not replace the journal's current official submission guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live author instructions on the Springer Nature Nat Ecol Evol site.

## When to trigger

- The author names Nature Ecology & Evolution as the target venue for an ecology or evolutionary biology study.
- A manuscript makes a conceptual claim about ecological processes, evolutionary mechanisms, or biodiversity patterns that the author believes has broad significance.
- The author is choosing between Nat Ecol Evol, Ecology Letters, Current Biology, and Nature for an ecology/evolution paper.
- The author needs this journal's desk-reject criteria and a credible alternative list for results that are rigorous but may fall short of the significance bar.

## Scope & topic fit

- Evolutionary mechanisms and molecular evolution: natural selection, genetic drift, adaptation, co-evolution, speciation — empirical and theoretical studies with broad mechanistic insight.
- Macroecology, global change biology, and biodiversity: large-scale patterns in species distributions, extinction risk, range shifts under climate change, and ecosystem function.
- Phylogenetics and comparative methods that resolve major evolutionary questions, not merely add taxa to an existing tree.
- Population ecology and evolutionary genetics at the interface — local adaptation, landscape genomics, eco-evolutionary dynamics.
- Community ecology and food-web dynamics where the conceptual advance pertains to general ecological principles.
- Palaeontology and macroevolution when the fossil record resolves a fundamental question about evolutionary tempo, mass extinction, or deep-time biodiversity dynamics.

## Method & evidence bar

- The conceptual advance must be stated and defended: a new mechanism, a resolution of a longstanding debate, or a quantitative pattern with general implications — not a new data point in an established framework.
- Quantitative and statistical rigor: phylogenetic comparative methods, multi-model inference, spatial statistics, or population-genetic inference should be current-best-practice and clearly justified.
- Large-scale or multi-system evidence is typically expected for broad claims; single-species or single-site studies must make unusually strong mechanistic or conceptual arguments.
- Open data and code: Nat Ecol Evol has strong expectations for data deposition (Dryad, Zenodo, GBIF, GenBank) and code availability (GitHub or equivalent).
- Reporting standards: field and lab studies may require ARRIVE-equivalent reporting; data analysis workflows must be reproducible.
- Preregistration is not standard for ecological/evolutionary studies but is valued for large observational studies with pre-specified hypotheses.

## Structure & house style

- Articles are the primary format; Letters (shorter) exist — re-check current article-type options and their distinct length limits.
- The title should convey the conceptual advance, not merely the system studied; "Evidence for X mechanism driving Y in Z" outperforms "Ecology of Z."
- The abstract should make the conceptual advance accessible to a non-specialist ecologist or evolutionary biologist; avoid jargon-heavy system descriptions.
- A Nature Reporting Summary (Life Sciences or similar) and a data availability statement are required.
- Extended Data carries additional analyses and figures integral to the argument; Supplementary Information holds secondary tables, sensitivity analyses, and methodological appendices.
- Methods sections must be comprehensive enough for independent replication; complex statistical or bioinformatic pipelines must be referenced with code.

## Official-submission checklist

- Before giving submission-ready advice, read `../../resources/source-basis.md` and `../../resources/official-source-map.md`; start from the official source anchors for this journal family, then cite the current journal-specific page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Nature Ecology & Evolution author guidelines" and follow the current Springer Nature version.
- Re-check article-type definitions and word/figure limits for Articles vs. Letters; confirm which types are currently accepting unsolicited submissions.
- Re-check data and code availability requirements and supported repositories; confirm deposition expectations for sequence data, occurrence data, and phylogenetic trees.
- Re-check the Reporting Summary format, competing-interests and funding disclosure, and AI-use policy.
- Confirm preprint policy (bioRxiv/EcoEvoRxiv posting is generally compatible); re-check embargo and media-relations requirements for high-profile submissions.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.

## Pre-submission self-check

- [ ] One sentence stating the conceptual advance in ecology or evolution — what does the field now understand differently?
- [ ] The contribution is framed as mechanistic or synthetic insight, not as the most comprehensive dataset or species list to date.
- [ ] The paper's significance is legible to an ecologist working on a different system and an evolutionary biologist working at a different scale.
- [ ] Data are deposited in an appropriate public repository; code is available and documented.
- [ ] The framing positions the advance against recent Nat Ecol Evol, Current Biology, and Ecology Letters literature on this question.
- [ ] Reporting Summary and data/code availability statements are prepared.

## Common desk-reject triggers

- A descriptive natural-history or survey study without a conceptual advance or testable mechanistic claim.
- An empirical study of a single species or site whose conclusion is too system-specific to resonate across ecology or evolution.
- A phylogenetic or genomic study that adds taxa or loci without resolving an evolutionary question of broad significance.
- A large dataset paper whose main claim is scale of data collection rather than conceptual insight derived from the data.
- Inadequate statistical rigor for the scale of claim: single-species selection studies without population-genetic controls, or macroecological claims without spatial autocorrelation treatment.

## Re-routing decision

- Short, idea-driven ecology paper with tight conceptual advance: `ecology-letters` (where brevity and conceptual clarity are rewarded).
- Molecular evolution, phylogenomics, or population-genetic inference: `molecular-biology-and-evolution` (methodologically rigorous molecular evolution).
- Plant-specific ecology or evolutionary mechanism: `the-plant-cell` is too narrow; consider Current Biology or New Phytologist.
- Microbial ecology with evolutionary or community-ecology framing: `nature-microbiology`.
- Broader significance reaching a non-specialist scientific audience: try Nature or Science first; if scope is right but ambition is lower, Current Biology (`current-biology`).

## Output format

```text
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Nature Ecology & Evolution
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest topics>
[Method/evidence] <does the conceptual advance and quantitative rigor clear the Nat Ecol Evol bar?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <article type/length / data-code deposition / Reporting Summary / disclosure / preprint policy>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>
```
