Manuscript Submission Overview

The Applied Veterinary Research (AVR) publishes four types of articles: 

Research Articles: original manuscripts that contain new discoveries in research consistent with the objectives and scope of the AVR. Original research works are limited to a maximum of 7,500 words.

Short Communications: short manuscripts (maximum 2,500 words) describing new findings or research information intended to disseminate this information rapidly. The Editorial Board will expedite the review process of this type of manuscript.

Review Articles: contains no new information, but rather summarizes the trends and recent developments within the areas inserted in the focus of the AVR. The review articles are limited to a maximum of 7,500 words.

Cases Reports/Clinical Reports: Case reports (maximum 2,500 words) describe an unusual or novel occurrence and, as such, remain one of the cornerstones of medical progress and provide many new ideas in medicine. Some reports contain an extensive review of the relevant literature on the topic. The case report is a rapid short communication between busy clinicians who may not have time or resources to conduct large-scale research.

For all types of articles, the number of words limit mentioned above does not consider the figures and tables, but references should be included in the total. The Editorial Board reserves the right to waive word boundaries, although it can request the Editor-in-Chief before the manuscript submission.

Special Issues

AVR encourages the publication of special issues. The Special Issue is dedicated to a single theme, well defined, and should contain between five and fifteen articles. The proposal for a special issue will be sent to the Editor-in-Chief and include the following: Title of the special issue, a brief description of the reason behind the special issue and, the deadline for the authors' presentations. All papers will normally be submitted to the evaluation process by peers, which includes the possibility of rejection. For more details on the preparation and publication of special issues, please contact the Editor-in-Chief.

Editorial Procedure

This journal uses software for plagiarism detection. We do not tolerate manuscripts that jeopardize ethics in publishing.

The authors are required to comply with the guidelines presented here. The Editorial Board may return the manuscripts that are inconsistent with the guidelines. The authors are also required to present the material in English clear and concise. Although the editorial board and reviewers can give suggestions to improve the clarity of language, this is not its role. Thus, the authors who wish to publish your articles in English must submit them for translation by a qualified person and present us with a certificate. The Editorial Board reserves the right to completely reject manuscripts whose interpretation is significantly hampered by language interests of clarity. 

# The language of articles published in Applied Veterinary Research: English only*.

*Brazilians or authors from countries of Portuguese origin may submit their manuscripts in Portuguese. If the article is accepted for publication, the authors will have to translate it into English.

We encourage authors to help expedite the review process bys, listing at least three potential reviewers (who had no role in the manuscript production) and your contact information. Authors can also list the people they prefer not review the manuscript. This information must be provided when article submission in the "Comments to the Editor" section. All manuscripts will be sent to at least two reviewers. Reviewers are invited to treat the manuscript as confidential. The trial of the Editor-in-Chief is final with respect to decisions on publication.

Text Editing

• Language: English; 

• Word Processor: Word for Windows;
• Text: Times New Roman, size 12. There should be no words in the text in bold;
• Spacing: 1.5 throughout the text;
• Page: A4 paper, portrait orientation, top and bottom margins of 2.5 cm, and left and right 3.0 cm, a maximum of 20 pages with lines and pages numbered;
• The quantities are expressed in SI (International System) and scientific terminology must follow international conventions of each area in question;
Scientific style: Gender and species names should be italicized.

Article organization

• Title: Only the first letter of the first word should be capitalized.
• Abstract: A maximum of 250 words;
• Keywords: At least three and no more than five but not included in the Title;
• Introduction: The Introduction should state the purpose of the investigation and give a brief review of the literature.
• Materials and Methods: This section must follow the Introduction and should provide sufficient information to allow the repetition of the experimental work.
• Results: This section should describe the outcome of the study. Data should be presented as concisely as possible, in the form of tables and figures, although very large tables should be avoided.
• Discussion: The Discussion should be an interpretation of the Results and their significance with reference to the work of other authors.
Note: The Results may be accompanied by the Discussion in the same section or separately.

• Acknowledgments: These should be as brief as possible. Any award that requires acknowledgment must be mentioned. The names of funding organizations should be written in full.
• References: The Reference list should only include work cited in the text and published or accepted for publication. Personal communications and unpublished works should only be mentioned in the text. Reference list entries should be in alphabetical order by surnames of the first author of each article.

• Research Articles

Souza Jr JBF, Oliveira VRM, Arruda AMV, Silva AM, Costa LLM (2015) The relationship between corn particle size and thermoregulation of laying hens in an equatorial semi-arid environment. International Journal of Biometeorology 59:121-125.

• Articles by DOI

Souza-Junior JBF, El-Sabrout K, Arruda AMV, Costa LLM (2019) Estimating sensible heat loss in laying hens through thermal imaging. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture. DOI: 10.1016/j.compag.2019.105038

• Book

Silva RG (2008) Biofísica ambiental: os animais e seu ambiente. Funep, Jaboticabal.

• Book chapter

Brown B, Aaron M (2001) The politics of nature. In: Smith J (ed) The rise of modern genomics, 3rd edn. Wiley, New York, pp 230-257.

• Online documents

Cartwright J (2007) Big stars have weather too. IOP Publishing PhysicsWeb. http://physicsweb.org/articles/news/11/6/16/1. Accessed on: June 26, 2007 

• Dissertation or Thesis

Souza Jr JBF (2012) Termorregulação e produção de ovos de galinhas Label Rouge em ambiente equatorial semiárido. Dissertation, Universidade Federal Rural do Semi-Árido.

Citations

References in the text should appear by name and year in parentheses. Some examples:
• This research spans many disciplines (Thompson 1990).
• This result was later contradicted by Becker and Seligman (1996).
• This effect has been extensively studied (Abbott 1991; Barakat et al 1995, Kelso and Smith 1998; Medvec et al 1999).

Tables

• All tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals.

• Tables should be cited in the text in numerical order.

• For each table, please provide a caption (title) in the upper table explaining the components.

• Identify any material previously published, making original source as a reference at the end of the table caption.

• Footnotes to tables should be indicated by superscript lower case letters (or asterisks for significance values and other statistical data) and included in the body of the table.

Figures 

For the best quality of the final product, it is highly recommended that the figures (graphics, photographs, etc.) are sent separately from the article in the additional documents section at the time of submission. The figures will be produced with the highest standards, accurately details. The published work will reflect directly on the quality of the provided work. Some questions should be taken into consideration:

• Provide the figures electronically.

• Indicate the graphics program that was used to create art.

• The TIFF format offers a higher quality for graphics. MS Office files are also acceptable.

• Name your picture files (graphics or photos) to "Figure" and its number, for example, Figure 1.

• The legend (title) should come at the bottom of the figure.