Call for Abstracts: Contributed Talks
101st ESA Annual Meeting Fort Lauderdale, Florida August 7 – 12, 2016
Deadline: Thursday, February 25, 2016 at 5:00 PM Eastern (2:00 PM Pacific)
Abstracts that are incomplete or received after the deadline will not be considered.
All ESA Annual Meeting proposal and abstract deadlines are 5:00 PM Eastern so that technical support and ESA staff assistance will be immediately available when submitters need it. If you begin your submission very close to the deadline, you are choosing to take a risk and we will not make an exception if you don’t complete your submission in time. The form automatically closes at 5:00 EST / 2:00 PST whether you have completed your submission or not. All abstracts must be submitted through the online form in order to be considered. We will not accept abstracts received by email. When you submit your abstract, you will be automatically notified of receipt by an email sent to the address that you provide. If you do not receive such a notification, please contact Program Coordinator Jennifer Riem at jennifer@esa.org to confirm that your abstract was received. You will be able to return to the abstract to edit it until the submission deadline has passed. Information on how to do so will be included in the automated email.
For more information, including abstract guidelines, click to expand the sections below.
About Contributed Oral Abstracts
Before You Begin
Please read and follow the abstract guidelines carefully. They are provided here as a guide to help you plan in advance. You can start your submission, save your progress, and then return to complete it at any time before the deadline has passed. A login and password will be automatically emailed to you when you begin an abstract submission. You may log in to view your abstract at any time HERE. If this is your first time submitting an abstract for an ESA meeting, we suggest reading some contributed abstracts from a previous meeting. Programs from recent meetings are available online (2015, 2014, 2013). If you are a student, we strongly encourage you to work closely with your faculty adviser as you develop your abstract. If you encounter problems during abstract submission, email Jennifer Riem and include the abstract ID number.
Abstract Guidelines
- The abstract must primarily report on new work within the field of ecology. Reviews of previous work are not permissible for contributed presentations.
- The body of the abstract is up to 400 words, split between the two sections (up to 200 words each): Background/Question/Methods, in which the objective of the study is clearly identified and the methods are described; and Results/Conclusions, in which specific results of the study are explicitly reported and their implications for ecology are briefly discussed.
- The abstract must report specific results. The results may be preliminary but they may not be vague. Abstracts without explicitly stated results will be rejected. It is understandable that abstracts describing non-traditional work may lack quantitative data; however, it is still expected that the abstract will address some question and have a “take-home message” describing specific findings.
- Abstracts must be clear. Poorly written abstracts will be rejected.
- Abstracts must be written in English and must follow standard grammar and punctuation rules. Abstracts that do not meet this guideline will be rejected.
- For every author listed, their name, institution, and email are required information.
- Missing coauthors are a very common issue. Be sure to check to make sure everyone has been included.
- Any author can be designated as the presenting author. The presenting author’s name will appear in bold text. The presenting author is also the corresponding author. In order to receive notifications from us, it is important to make sure the correct person is indicated and that their email is entered correctly
If you are unsure if your presentation meets our guidelines, please ask us. We would rather talk to you about it in advance than send you a rejection notice in April.
Session Assignment
- During abstract submission, you will rank 3 themes to guide the grouping of your presentation into a session with similar presentations.
- Consider the themes carefully. We encourage you to browse sessions from recent conferences (2015, 2014, 2013) to see which session themes you would feel most at home in. Your colleagues who do similar work may not be ranking the topics you would think.
- Each contributed talk may be scheduled Monday afternoon through Friday morning. By submitting an abstract, you are indicating you will be available during any of the possible time slots. Special scheduling requests cannot be honored.
Editing Abstracts Abstract editing will be available for a short window (2-3 weeks) in April and early May. All presenting authors will receive instructions and a specific deadline by email. Edits are not possible outside the May editing window.
Meeting Registration The presenting author of every accepted abstract will also need to register and will be reminded to do so in meeting correspondence. Registration is a separate process that will open in April.
One Presentation Rule
- Each person is allowed to submit only one abstract where they are listed as presenting author. This rule is enforced in order to encourage broad participation.
- Coauthors are not included in this rule. A person may serve as a coauthor on any number of abstracts.
Exceptions to the rule: An author may submit an abstract for a second presentation if one of the abstracts:
- primarily reports on ecology education or outreach.
- primarily reports on the history of ecology as a discipline (through 2016).
- is for an Ignite presentation.
Other things you can still do that are not affected by the rule:
- Serve as a session organizer and/or moderator for any session type.
- Preside over a contributed session.
- Speak in a workshop or special session.
Please contact Program Coordinator Jennifer Riem if you have questions about whether an abstract fits these criteria.
Student Awards
Cancellations and No Shows
Presentation Guidelines
- Contributed oral presentations are scheduled for 20 minute timeslots. 15 minutes are allotted for each presentation plus 5 minutes for questions. Time limits will be strictly enforced by the session presider, who will warn each speaker when they are approaching their time limit.
- The 5 minute period between talks belongs to the audience, not to the speaker. This period allows for questions, discussion, and a smooth transition to the next speaker. Please respect the audience’s time. Q&A will be managed by the session presider.
- All presenters are expected to arrive at their session room 20 minutes in advance of their session. This time is for checking in with the session presider and transferring your presentation to the laptop in the room. A student A/V volunteer will be available to assist you.
Technical Information
We realize that losing speaking time due to technical glitches or other problems is a frustrating and stressful experience. This information is provided to presenters in advance in order to help minimize problems on the day of the presentation.
- Please bring a copy of your presentation on a USB Flash drive.
- Each meeting room will be equipped with a dedicated LCD projector and PC laptop. The laptop will be running Windows 7 with MS Office 2010 Suite.
- Microsoft PowerPoint and Adobe Acrobat are the recommended formats for slides. These file types will work most smoothly on the laptops we provide.
- All speakers are welcome to test their slides in advance in a Speaker Ready Room. You may sign up for a time to test your presentation at the Information Desk. We especially recommend testing your slides if you are using a format other than PowerPoint or Adobe.
- We advise against relying on an internet connection for any critical aspects of a presentation. Although our laptops are wireless enabled, the availability of a wireless connection varies between meeting sites. In years when it is present, the reliability may vary between rooms and over time. If your presentation will feature internet content, be sure to have backup versions ready (screenshots, for example).
- You may use your own laptop for your presentation if necessary. We ask that you be considerate of the presenter following you and make sure your technical setup does not take away from any of their presentation time. Please make sure that you and/or the A/V volunteer can disconnect and reconnect the dedicated laptop quickly. Mac users will need to bring their own VGA dongle.
- Laser pointers will be provided for each session.
- Remote slide advancers (clickers) will be available in each room this year.
Important Dates
February 25, 2016 | Abstract submission deadline. |
April 14, 2016 | Notification of acceptance sent to presenting author. |
May 1, 2016* | Deadline to cancel without penalty. This is also the deadline for editing abstracts. |
May 19, 2016 | Notification of scheduling (session date and time) sent to presenting author. |
* Since May 1 falls on a Sunday in 2016, we will consider cancellations received through Monday, May 2 to be timely.
Questions?