Ibis | |
Cover: | Cover of Ibis.jpg |
Former Names: | --> |
Abbreviation: | Ibis |
Discipline: | Ornithology |
Language: | English |
Editor: | Dominic J. McCafferty |
Publisher: | Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the British Ornithologists' Union |
Country: | United Kingdom |
History: | 1859–present |
Frequency: | Quarterly |
Impact: | 1.804 |
Impact-Year: | 2015 |
Issn: | 1474-919X |
Website: | http://www.bou.org.uk/pubibis.html |
Link1: | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1474-919X/currentissue |
Link1-Name: | Online access |
Link2: | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1474-919X/issues |
Link2-Name: | Online archive |
Ibis (formerly The Ibis), subtitled the International Journal of Avian Science, is the peer-reviewed scientific journal of the British Ornithologists' Union. It was established in 1859.[1] Topics covered include ecology, conservation, behaviour, palaeontology, and taxonomy of birds. The editor-in-chief is Dominic J. McCafferty (University of Glasgow).[2] The journal is published by Wiley-Blackwell in print and online. It is available free on the internet for institutions in the developing world through the OARE scheme (Online Access to Research in the Environment).[3]
In 1858 the British Ornithologists' Union (BOU) was formed. It was the first organization, devoted solely to the study of birds. One year later members of the BOU founded a (Quarterly) "Magazine of General Ornithology," entitled The Ibis.
In the preface of the first issue of The Ibis the editor, Philip Lutley Sclater, recalls that in a meeting in the autumn of 1857 a group of ornithologists who would soon establish the British Ornithologists' Union, there was a "strong feeling that it would be advisable to establish a Magazine devoted solely to Ornithology." A year later, in what was called "the annual assemblage" of November 1858, it was determined, after due consideration, "by those present that a Quarterly Magazine of General Ornithology should be established, that a limited subscription should be entered into to provide a fund for that purpose, and that the subscribers should form an 'Ornithological Union'.
In the first eighty years of its existence, a very large part of the contents of The Ibis was devoted to what is called "geographical ornithology", "the study of the birds of the different countries of the world" in the words of P.L. Sclater.[9] Sclater had given the start to this important trend in scientific ornithology in his 1858 article in the Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London, entitled "On the Geographic Distribution of the Members of the Class Aves".[10] In this period British ornithology reflected the development of Britain as an empire.[11]
"No doubt the preoccupation with widely extended geographical ornithology was fostered by the immensity of the areas over which British rule or influence stretched during the nineteenth century and for some time afterwards." and see