Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
In the very first issue of Functional Ecology, the founding editors, Peter Calow and John Grace, said "The success and identity of a journal depends not so much on the Society behind it, nor even on the editors and their board, but on the scientists contributing to it." (Calow Sayer & Ferry, 2023). For over 15 years, we have also offered authors the option to publish Open Access in Functional Ecology, paying an article processing charge to make their findings freely available to the many readers without a subscription to the journal. In recent years, the number of authors taking this option has increased significantly, with more than half of our papers now being published open access and thus benefitting from the increased readership that this brings. Some content, however, still remains paywalled and less accessible to readers. In our move to becoming a fully open-access journal, we assure that all our content is equally accessible to all researchers—and we are also taking steps to ensure publishing in the journal remains accessible to all authors. While the majority of our authors have funding for open access available (provided by their department or institution, as part of their grant funding or through the increasing number of transformational deals), we will be providing author waivers through both Research4Life and the separate British Ecological Society waiver policy as well. While Research4Life waivers are offered to authors in low-income countries, additional waivers are available for authors submitting to Functional Ecology from the rest of the world. These waivers are granted in line with the BES waiver policy, which applies to all BES open-access journals. The importance of the BES waiver policy is evident from the data we have from our sister journal, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (MEE), which became a fully open-access journal two years ago. For MEE, waiver requests have come from (and been granted to) authors in over 15 different countries on six continents, at career stages ranging from students to emeritus professors and both within and outside of academia. Those waivers have made it possible for authors who were previously unable to publish open access to do so and to reap the benefits of the increased exposure publishing open access brings: papers that are read more, cited more and cited by a broader audience (Huang et al., 2024). What we seek to publish remains unchanged: papers that significantly advance our mechanistic understanding of ecological pattern and process from the organismic to the ecosystem scale. To authors, we will continue to provide support and guidance in writing and publishing those papers, and we will continue to help readers find and access important content via plain language summaries, blog posts, podcasts or social media promotion. Finally, we are with Peter Calow and John Grace in believing that our authors are our biggest strength. In moving to open access with a clear plan to support authors, we hope that the benefits of publishing in Functional Ecology will be available to an even larger portion of the ecological community. We thank you for your continued support and look forward to taking this exciting step with you.
Ferry et al. (Mon,) studied this question.