Huang, Yang
Liu, Lan-Ying
Liu, Chang-Qiu
Lu, Qing-Biao
Gong, Qiang-Bang
Cai, Bo
Hu, Xing-Hua
Funding for this research was provided by:
National Natural Science Foundation of China (31971563)
National Natural Science Foundation of China (31560068)
Survey and Germplasm Conservation of Plant Species with Extremely Small Populations in South-West China (2017FY100100)
Article History
Received: 11 February 2020
Accepted: 16 February 2021
First Online: 8 March 2021
Compliance with ethical standards
:
: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
: The study did not involve research involving human participants and/or animals.
: In the study “Diverse large Lepidoptera pollinators promote the naturalisation of Crinum asiaticum under cultivation despite apparent floral specialisation”, we observed the following rules: The manuscript should not be submitted to more than one journal for simultaneous consideration. The submitted work should be original and should not have been published elsewhere in any form or language (partially or in full), unless the new work concerns an expansion of previous work. (Please provide transparency on the re-use of material to avoid the concerns about text-recycling (‘self-plagiarism’). A single study should not be split up into several parts to increase the quantity of submissions and submitted to various journals or to one journal over time (i.e. ‘salami-slicing/publishing’). Concurrent or secondary publication is sometimes justifiable, provided certain conditions are met. Examples include: translations or a manuscript that is intended for a different group of readers. Results should be presented clearly, honestly, and without fabrication, falsification or inappropriate data manipulation (including image based manipulation). Authors should adhere to discipline-specific rules for acquiring, selecting and processing data. No data, text, or theories by others are presented as if they were the author’s own (‘plagiarism’). Proper acknowledgements to other works must be given (this includes material that is closely copied (near verbatim), summarized and/or paraphrased), quotation marks (to indicate words taken from another source) are used for verbatim copying of material, and permissions secured for material that is copyrighted.