---
name: nature-water
description: Use when targeting Nature Water (Nat Water) or deciding whether a water-science or water-engineering manuscript fits this high-impact Nature-family venue. Encodes the journal's fit, framing, method-and-evidence bar, house style, official-submission re-check, and desk-reject heuristics.
---

# Nature Water (nature-water)

## Journal positioning

Nature Water is a Springer Nature journal that publishes high-impact primary research, reviews, and analysis on the science and engineering of water across natural and engineered systems. Its defining character is breadth with significance: the journal spans the full water cycle and the human-water interface — water resources, hydrology, treatment and supply technology, water quality and contaminants, reuse, and the policy and societal dimensions of water — selecting work that is novel, rigorous, and consequential for the field and for society. As a Nature-family title it applies a high bar for conceptual advance and broad relevance, and it values papers that connect technical findings to real-world water challenges. Readership spans hydrologists, environmental engineers, water-quality scientists, and the policy community. 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 Nature Water site.

## When to trigger

- The author names Nature Water as the target for a high-impact water-science or water-engineering paper with broad significance.
- A manuscript advances understanding of a water system — natural or engineered — in a way that is novel and consequential, and the author is choosing between Nature Water, Water Research, and Nature Sustainability.
- A paper integrates technical water science with resource, quality, or policy implications in a way that reaches beyond a single subdiscipline.
- The author needs Nature Water's conceptual-advance bar, breadth requirement, and desk-reject criteria before submission.

## Scope & topic fit

- Water resources and hydrology: water availability, scarcity, the terrestrial water cycle, groundwater, and human-water system interactions with broad significance.
- Water treatment and supply engineering: novel processes and materials for treatment, desalination, and distribution where the advance is general and impactful.
- Water quality and contaminants: emerging pollutants, micropollutants, fate and transport, and exposure with consequences for human or ecosystem health.
- Water reuse and the circular water economy: recovery, reuse systems, and resource recovery framed for broad relevance.
- Policy-relevant and societal water science: governance, equity, security, and management, especially where coupled to quantitative analysis.
- Cross-cutting work linking natural and engineered systems, or technical findings to societal water challenges.

## Method & evidence bar

- The conceptual advance and its significance must be identifiable in one or two sentences; incremental or narrowly technical work is misfit for a Nature-family title.
- Methodological rigor is expected: appropriate controls, replication, uncertainty quantification, and sensitivity analysis for key assumptions.
- Engineering and treatment claims need realistic conditions, mass balances, and comparison against relevant benchmarks — not idealized lab-only performance presented as breakthrough.
- Field, modeling, and observational claims need clear provenance, validation, and honest treatment of limitations and generalizability.
- Data and code must be deposited in a FAIR-compliant public repository with persistent identifiers; availability statements are mandatory.
- Claims of societal or policy relevance must be supported by analysis, not asserted.

## Structure & house style

- Nature Water uses the Nature-family format: a concise main text with a tight abstract, integrated narrative, and Methods placed after the main text; re-check current word, display-item, and reference limits on the live site.
- The introduction is short and frames the advance and its broad significance immediately; the readership is expert and cross-disciplinary.
- Display items must be efficient and publication-quality; each carries a key result, with extended data and supplementary information carrying additional analyses.
- Methods are detailed and reproducible, reported after the main text per Nature-family convention.
- The abstract is unstructured and must convey the advance and its significance to a broad water audience.
- Reporting-standard and data-availability statements are required, along with author-contribution and competing-interests statements.

## 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 Water submission guidelines" and follow the current Springer Nature version.
- Re-check current word, display-item, and reference limits for each article type; confirm Methods-after-main-text and Extended Data conventions.
- Re-check Nature-family data-availability and code-availability policy; confirm accepted FAIR repositories and persistent-identifier requirements.
- Re-check reporting-standards, author-contribution, competing-interests, funding, and AI-use disclosure; confirm preprint policy (bioRxiv/EarthArXiv posting is generally compatible).
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.

## Pre-submission self-check

- [ ] One sentence — the central advance in water science or engineering and why it matters broadly and societally.
- [ ] The paper offers a clear conceptual advance, not an incremental or narrowly technical result.
- [ ] Engineering/treatment claims use realistic conditions and benchmarks; field/model claims report validation and limitations.
- [ ] The advance is stated in the abstract and opening without requiring subdiscipline-specific background.
- [ ] Data and code are deposited in a FAIR repository with persistent identifiers; availability statements are ready.
- [ ] The paper is positioned against recent Nature Water / Water Research literature on this question.

## Common desk-reject triggers

- An incremental treatment-process optimization or a site-specific water study without a general, consequential advance.
- A narrowly technical engineering result presented without broad significance or societal framing.
- Lab-only performance claims under idealized conditions presented as a breakthrough without realistic validation.
- A descriptive monitoring dataset or model application without a conceptual advance.
- A missing or non-compliant data/code availability statement, or asserted policy relevance without supporting analysis.

## Re-routing decision

- A rigorous water-engineering or water-quality study without the broad cross-disciplinary significance a Nature-family title requires: `water-research`.
- A broader sustainability framing where water is one dimension of a coupled human-environment advance: `nature-sustainability`.
- A short, high-impact hydrology or land-water finding for the geoscience community: `geophysical-research-letters`.
- A broader environmental-science scope beyond water systems: `environmental-science-and-technology`.

## Output format

```text
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Nature Water
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest topics>
[Method/evidence] <is there a clear, broadly significant advance in water science/engineering, rigorously defended with realistic validation and uncertainty?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <word/display-item/reference limits / Methods-after-text & Extended Data / FAIR data-code deposition / reporting standards / disclosure / preprint policy>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>
```
