Style Request: Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine

Anyone have this style available? I tried to import the .ens style from Endnote, and no luck. Thanks!
  • Sorry, here you go:


    1. Boever, W. J., S. McDonald, and R.F. Solorzano. 1977. Feline viral rhinotracheitis in a colony of clouded leopards. Vet. Med. Small Anim. Clin. 72: 1859 - 1866.


    2. Flanagan, J.P. 1999. Snakebite protocols for zoos. In: Fowler, M. E., and R.E. Miller (eds.). Zoo & Wild Animal Medicine, 4th ed. W. B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pp. 95-100


    ISSN: 1042-7260 (Print), 1042-7260 (Linking)

    Link to website and guide to authors: http://jzwm.allentrack.net/cgi-bin/main.plex
  • we actually need the specific examples given on the page. See my comment here https://forums.zotero.org/discussion/31502/style-request-for-aspet-journals/#Item_4 for an explanation and the next post for an example.
  • Ah, I see. Sorry! Hopefully this will help a bit.

    (doubled spaced)

    1. Campbell, J. L., and O. K. Pedersen. 2007. The varieties of capitalism and hybrid success. Comp. Pol. Stud. 40: 307–332.

    2. Mares, I. 2001. Firms and the welfare state: When, why, and how does social policy matter to employers? In: Hall, P. A., and D. Soskice (eds.). Varieties of Capitalism. The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage, Xth ed. Oxford University Press, New York, New York. Pp. 184–213.

    Here's a couple other posts from the "to authors" site:

    The Literature Cited heading is in all capital letters and is centered. This heading always appears at the top of a new page.
    Literature citations should be identified in the text and tables by a superscript number (that follows concluding sentence punctuation). Avoid citing papers or studies in the text by the author’s name. When a series of consecutive references (such as 3,4,5,6) are being cited as a group in one place in the text, these
    3 – 6
    can be presented with hyphenated superscripts ( ).
    Citations should be listed in alphabetic order by first author’s surname. When there is more than one paper by authors whose names appear in the same order in each paper, the papers are listed in chronological order. Papers with multiple authors but the same lead author are arranged together, alphabetically by second, and then by third, author, etc. Papers by the same authors in the same year are assigned a letter suffix (e.g., 1 983a).

    All citations must have at least one author. In some cases, that author may be the institution that published the work. "Anonymous" cannot be listed as an author. (See examples below)

    All authors of a cited paper must be listed in the Literature Cited section (et al. is not used).

    Initials only are used for the first and middle names in all citations. Initials are placed after authors’ names only in the case of the first author of each citation. The name of the last author in each reference should be preceded by a comma and the word "and," even if there are only two authors.

    The names of editors of sources in which an authored reference is included (textbooks, compendia, etc.) should be given before the name of their cited work but after the author’s name and title of the cited section, using the format "In: Doe, J. (ed.)." with the word "In" underlined (including the colon) to indicate italics.

    Only the first word and proper nouns in titles of papers begin with a capital letter. For all other types of references (book titles), all major words begin with a capital letter. Inclusive page numbers are given when one reference in a book is cited. Pages are not given when more than one reference in a book is cited. The issue number is indicated in parentheses after the volume number only if the pages of the journal cited are numbered by issue rather than by volume. (The Journal is numbered by volume). Names of journals are spelled out if only one word and abbreviated if more than one word. See the Appendix for standard abbreviations. Improperly abbreviated journal names are a common source of delay in the editing process.

    The abbreviation "Abstr." should be used to designate references that are abstracts. Citations of unpublished work, personal communications, and product inserts are listed in parentheses in the text and do not appear with the Literature Cited.

    Articles that have been accepted for publication but have not yet been published should be listed in the Literature Cited section with the designation "(In press)" following the author’s name. Articles that have been submitted but not yet accepted by a journal should be listed as unpublished in the text and should not appear with the Literature Cited.

    Examples: (Please note the indentation of first lines, spacing between references; in addition each citation should be double spaced, which is not shown here .)

    1. Boever, W. J., S. McDonald, and R.F. Solorzano. 1977. Feline viral rhinotracheitis in a colony of clouded leopards. Vet. Med. Small Anim. Clin. 72: 1859 - 1866.

    2. Bousquet, D., and B. G. Brackett. 1982. Penetration of zona-free hamster ova as a test to assess fertilizing ability of bullsperm after frozen storage. Theriogenology. 17: 199-2 13.

    3. Flanagan, J.P. 1999. Snakebite protocols for zoos. In: Fowler, M. E., and R.E. Miller (eds.). Zoo & Wild Animal Medicine, 4th ed. W. B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pp. 95-100.
  • great, thanks, it's bookmarked.
  • The style is now up. It will appear on the style repository within 30mins.. (See here if you need instructions for installing styles in standalone.)

    Any problems please let us know.
  • Thank you soooo much!
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