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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.

Author Guidelines

English tittle

Name Surname 1, Name Surname 2, Name Surname 2,*
1 Affiliation 1; e-mail@e-mail.com
2 Affiliation 2; e-mail@e-mail.com
* Correspondent author; e-mail@e-mail.com

Abstract: One column and about 200 words. Abstracts should include an overview of the work. The abstract should state briefly the purpose of the research, the methods, the principal results and major conclusions. References may not be cited in the summary. Abbreviations should be limited, if used, they must be explained on their first use.
Key words: keyword 1; keyword 2; keyword 3 The Abstract shall be followed by a maximum of six relevant keywords. These keywords will be used for indexing purposes. Key words should be placed in alphabetical order.

INTRODUCTION
The introduction should include a brief review of relevant research, taking into account the most recent and most important publications, and conclude with a clear research hypothesis and the aim of the study.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

The approval of the relevant Ethics Committee of the procedures used in experiments on animals has to be cited at the beginning of this section. The details of conducting experiments should be sufficient to allow the work to be repeated by others. New methods and protocols should be described in detail, while well-known methods may be briefly described and cited appropriately. All procedures used for processing of experimental material and analytical methods should be given. All sources of products, equipment, and chemicals used in the experiments must be specified parenthetically at first mention. All measurements should be expressed in SI units. Experimental animals/plants should be identified by designation of their genus, species and strain, and of their age, sex, genetic and physiological status. Math equations should be submit as editable text and not as images. Methods of statistical processing should be indicated. Programs (including the version of the software) used for data processing should be clearly cited. Specific parameters or variables used in programs should be clearly stated. Research manuscripts reporting large datasets that are deposited in a publicly accessible database should state where the data has been deposited and provide appropriate access to it.

RESULTS

The results can be presented in tables or in graphic form (figures, photographs) and shortly described in the text. The text should not duplicate the tabular data. There should be no literature comparisons.
All figures and tables should be cited in the text. Tables should contain only data that are directly relevant for the main conclusions of the manuscript or facilitate the understanding of the text. Tables should be prepared using the table creation function in Microsoft Word® and can be placed wherever the authors think is best. They should be referred in the text by arabic numerals. They should be numbered in the order in which they appear in the text. Ensure that the data presented in Tables do not duplicate results described elsewhere in the manuscript. Tables should be largely self-explanatory with symbols and colors preferably explained within the figure. Tables and column headings should be brief. All abbreviations and symbols should be defined in the footnotes. Values listed in tables should not contain insignificant digits after the decimal point (e.g., 1610.2009 ± 0.3011 = 1610.2 ± 0.3).
Figures should be submitted in JPEG or TIFF format with the highest resolution possible (minimum 300 dpi) and provided in the size in which they should be printed . If figures or diagrams are created in a Microsoft Office application (Word, PowerPoint, Excel) please submit in the native document format. Figures should be referred to within the text as ‘Figure’ and should be numbered according to their sequence in the text. Make sure you use uniform lettering and sizing of your figures. Figures with more than one part should be labelled with lower case letters. Figures should be largely self-explanatory with symbols and colors preferably explained within the figure.

DISCUSSION

Authors should provide a conclusion to their work and express an opinion on the relevance of the results in the context of other works cited in the paper.

CONCLUSION (if relevant)

One or two conclusions originating from the study should be formulated in the present tense. Repetition of the main results should be avoided.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Authors should provide the source of their funding.
Conflict of interest
The following statement should be added to the text of the manuscript: The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

References

In the body of the manuscript:
At the begginning of sentence:
1. Papers with one author: Nowak (2009)
2. Papers with two authors: Nowak and Kowalski (2009) or Nowak and Kowalski (2009, 2010)
3. Papers with more than two authors: Nowak et al. (2009)

At the end of the sentence:

1. Papers with one author: (Nowak, 2009)
2. Papers with two authors: (Nowak and Kowalski, 2010) or (Nowak and Kowalski, 2010, 2011a,b)
3. Papers with more than two authors: (Nowak et al. 2016)
4. More than one article listed in the same sentence of text (Nowak, 2009; Nowak and Kowalski, 2010; Nowak et al. 2016). References must be in chronical order. If publications dates are the same they should be placed in alphabetical order: (Näther et al. 2009; Nowak, 2009)
5. Work that has not been accepted for publication: A. Nowak (personal communication)
6. The author's own un-published work (A. Nowak, unpublished data)

References section

All references cited in the text must be listed in the Reference List, and vice versa. References shall first be listed alphabetically by author(s)' last name(s), and then chronologically. All authors' names must appear in the Reference section. More than one reference from the same author(s) in the same year must be identified by the letters 'a', 'b', 'c', etc., placed after the year of publication. The year of publication follows the authors’ names. Journal names should be abbreviated according to the List of Title Word Abbreviations. Links to websites are acceptable, but must include the full address and date of access.

Examples
Article:
Jéquier, E., and F. Constant. 2010. Water as an essential nutrient: the physiological basis of hydration. Eur. J. Clin. Nutr. 64:115–123.
Zhi-hui, Z., H. Qi, W. Lin-feng, W. Qiao-hua, and M. Mei-hu. 2019. Early identification of male and female embryos based on UV/Vis transmission spectroscopy and extreme learning machine. Spectrosc. Spectr. Anal. 39:2780–2787 (in Chinese with English abstract).
Book:
Falconer, D. S. 1996. Introduction to quantitative genetics. Pearson Education India.
National Research Council. 1994. Nutrient Requirements of Poultry. 9th rev. ed. Natl. Acad. Press, Washington, DC
Chapter in an edited book:
Trotereau, A., and C. Schouler. 2019. Use of a chicken embryo lethality assay to assess the efficacy of phage therapy. Pages 199−205 in Bacteriophages. M.R.J. Clokie, A. Kropinski and R. Lavigne, eds. Springer New York, New York, NY
Federal Register:
FAO 2022. https://www.fao.org/livestock-environment/en/. Accessed: March 14, 2023.
Other:
Misztal, I., S. Tsuruta, T. Strabel, B. Auvray, T. Druet, and D. H. Lee. 2002. BLUPF90 and related programs (BGF90). Pages Communication No. 28–07 in Proc. 7th World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production, Montpellier, France
Hyperspectral identification of egg fertility and gender, US patent, US20130044210A1.
Tang, L. 2018. Study on the immunoprotective effect of the surface antigens EtSAG4, EtSAG16 and EtSAG22 of Eimeria tenella. PhD Thesis. Huazhong Agricultural University.
SAS. 2000. SAS User’s Guide. SAS Institute, Cary Version 12
Purcell, S., Neale, B., Todd-Brown, K., Thomas, L., Ferreira, M. A., Bender, D., Maller, J., Sklar, P., de Bakker, P., Daly, M.J. and Sham, P.C. 2007. PLINK: a tool set for whole-genome association and population-based linkage analyses. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 81: 559-575

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