About the Journal

Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association

The Florida Mosquito Control Associaiton (former Florida Anti-Mosqito Associaiton organized since 1922) had published the report of annual meeting since 1929 (Vol. 1) to 1975 (Vol. 46). The Florida Anti-Mosquito Association had changed the publication title from report to the proceedings of the FAMA since 1976 (Vol. 47) to 1980 (Vol. 50) annually, only Vol. 50 (1980) was semi-annual.The FAMA has changed the publication title  from proceedings to the Journal of the FAMA Vol 52, 1981 to Vol 60, 1989. Since 1990, the FAMA changed the association name from the FAMA to the Florida Mosquito Control Association (FMCA) and also changed the publication name from the JFAMA to the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Associaiton (JFMCA) with the issued ISSN number for print and published Vol 61, 1990 to Vol. 65, 1993 semi-annually. In 1994, the FMCA published the JFMCA Vol. 65 (last Volume). During the 24 year period, the FMCA published 10 Volumes of the Technical Bulletin of the FMCA (TBFMCA) at irregular basis. In 2018 the FMCA Board decided to continue to publish the JFMCA annually (one Volume per year) with the same number of ISSN for print and a new number of the ISSN for online, and since 2019 the FMCA has published the JFMCA Vol. 66, Vol. 67, 2020, and Vol. 68, 2021. Also the FMCA continues to publish the Technical Bulletin of the FMCA at irregular basis.  

Policies of the JFMCA

Open Access Policy
The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association (JFMCA) is a peer-reviewed journal and provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. There are no publication charges now, and all content is freely available without charge to the user or their institution. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without asking prior permission from the publisher or the author for non-commercial purposes. Nonetheless, reproduction, posting, transmission or other distribution or use of the article or any material therein requires credit to the original publication source with a link to both the article and the license. This open access policy is in accordance with the Budapest Open Access Initiative's (BOAI) definition of open access.

Copyright to Your Publication
As described in the Author Agreement, author(s) retain copyright to their publications in the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association. The Florida Mosquito Control Association (FMCA) retains the ownership and copyright of the journal. As an open access journal, we disseminate all content under a Creative Commons Attribution - Non Commercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0 license). By publishing in the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association, authors agree that the terms of this license will be applied to the submission.

The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association adopted a CC BY-NC 4.0 license to publish all articles beginning with Volume 68, No. 1. Authors of all articles published prior to the official adoption of the license retain copyright to their work, granting the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association right of first publication.


Self-Archiving Policy
The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association permits and encourages authors to post items submitted to the journal on personal websites or institutional repositories both prior to and after publication, while providing bibliographic details that credit, if applicable, its publication in this journal.


Preservation Policy
Content published in the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association will be preserved by the George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida. The Libraries are committed to long-term digital preservation of all materials in UF-supported collaborative projects. Redundant digital archives, adherence to proven standards, and rigorous quality control methods protect digital objects. The UF Digital Collections provide a comprehensive approach to digital preservation, including technical supports, reference services for both online and offline archived files, and support services by providing training and consultation for digitization standards for long-term digital preservation.

Content will be preserved indefinitely, unless a specific request for removal of a specific item is directed to the journal managers. If you believe that your copyrighted material has been deposited into this journal without consent, please contact the administrators at the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association.


Plagiarism Statement
The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association does not accept articles containing material plagiarized from other publications or authors.

For the purposes of this policy, plagiarism is defined as copying of or reliance on work — including text, images and data — by others or yourself without proper attribution. Please be aware that you can plagiarize yourself; you must provide proper attribution in all cases where your previously published material or previously used data or images are included in your manuscript.

Plagiarism detected prior to publication will cause rejection of your manuscript. Plagiarism detected after publication will cause the published article to be amended to state that it contains plagiarized material; in extreme cases of plagiarism, the publication will be removed at the Editors’ discretion, and the reason for removal stated on the journal's website.

The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association does not consider the following situations to be plagiarism when proper attribution is made:

  • Translations into English of a previously published paper not in English;
  • Publication of all or part of a revised thesis or dissertation;
  • Publication of a paper previously made public as a conference presentation, white paper, technical report, or preprint.

The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association follows workflows developed by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) to deal with cases of plagiarism.


Use of Third-Party Copyrighted Materials
When submitting your manuscript, please be mindful of copyright laws in the United States and (if outside the U.S.) your home country. The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association respects the intellectual property of scholars, students, and publishers, and we ask that you secure appropriate permissions or evaluate whether your incorporation of images, figures, charts, quotations, and other materials falls within the scope of fair use/fair dealing.

If you are incorporating published materials that you have previously authored, be aware that in many cases your publisher may now own the copyright and you may need to seek permission to reprint your own work.

The George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida provides resources on copyright and fair use, with an emphasis on U.S. Copyright Law: https://guides.uflib.ufl.edu/copyright


Correction, Retraction, and Removal of Articles
Correction. Despite the best of efforts, errors occur and their timely and effective remedy are considered the mark of responsible authors and editors. The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association will publish a correction if the scholarly record is seriously affected (e.g., if accuracy/intended meaning, scientific reproducibility, author reputation, or journal reputation is judged to be compromised). Corrections that do not affect the contribution in a material way or significantly alter the reader's understanding of the contribution, such as misspellings or grammatical errors, will not be published. When a correction is published, it will link to and from the work. The correction will be added to the original work so that readers will receive the original work and the correction. All corrections will be as concise as possible.
Retraction. The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association reserves the right to retract items, with a retraction defined as a public disavowal, not an erasure or removal. Retractions will occur if the editors and editorial board finds that the main conclusion of the work is undermined or if subsequent information about the work comes to light of which the authors or the editors were not aware at the time of publication. Infringements of professional ethical codes, such as multiple submission, inaccurate claims of authorship, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data will also result in retraction of the work.
Removal. Some circumstances may necessitate removal of a work from the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association. This will occur when the article is judged by the editors and editorial board to be defamatory, if it infringes on legal rights, or if there is a reasonable expectation that it will be subject to a court order. The bibliographic information about the work will be retained online, but the work will no longer be available through the journal. A note will be added to indicate that the item was removed for legal reasons.


Data-Sharing Policy
Authors of research papers submitted for publication in the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association are encouraged to make the data underlying their articles available online whenever possible. For the purposes of this policy, the term "data" is understood broadly and refers to both quantitative and qualitative research outputs, spanning observations and analysis of social settings (producing numbers, texts, images, multimedia or other content) to numbers attained through instrumental and other raw data gathering efforts, quantitative analysis, text mining, or citation analysis, as well as protocols, methods, and code used to generate any specific finding reported in the paper. The Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association editorial board prefers that the data be submitted as supplemental files accompanying the article, or be archived in a secure repository that provides a persistent identifier, assures long-term access, and provides sufficient documentation and metadata to support re-use by other investigators.

Acceptable solutions include institutional repositories; repositories specifically focused on data curation, or domain specific repositories. If there is no relevant public repository available, and the data cannot easily be included in a supplement, authors should describe how the data are being curated and made available or, in the case where they cannot be made available (e.g., IRB restrictions), why that is so. In any case, a citation to the dataset should be made in the article itself in accordance with the data citation principles of the FORCE11 "Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles", including an ORCID for the researcher(s) associated with the data. Finally, we recommend that whenever possible authors explicitly define the terms of re-use by assigning a license to their data, choosing, for instance, among Creative Commons or Open Data Commons licenses.

This data policy does not require data publication and citation at this time due to still-emergent standards for data peer review; the lack of sufficiently robust and distributed infrastructure to support the variety of disciplinary research occurring in our field; uncertainty whether the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association should provide a third mode of data publication in the form of “data papers” or “data descriptors”; and insufficient preparation and notification to the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association contributors to ensure datasets are properly curated with the aim of publication. Authors unable to share their data must provide written explanation of this circumstance in their cover letter at the time of submission.

 

Copyright Notice
By submitting the Journal of the Florida Mosquito Control Association, the author(s) agree to the terms of the Author Agreement. All authors retain copyrights associated with their article contributions and agree to make such contributions available under a CC BY-NC4.0 license upon publication.

By granting this license, I acknowledge that I have read and agreed to the terms of this agreement.