Nature Plants (nature-plants)
Journal positioning
Nature Plants is the Nature Portfolio journal devoted to plant science in its full
breadth — from molecular and cell biology through development, physiology, genetics,
and evolution to ecology and crop science — including the plant-associated microbes and
the agricultural and societal contexts in which plants matter. Its defining expectation
is a significant advance with broad significance: a finding that changes how a wide
plant-science readership thinks about a problem, not a clean but incremental result that
extends one specialist literature. A technically sound, narrowly framed specialist paper
with no broad significance is a poor fit, however careful the work. This skill is a fit
/ venue-selection / re-framing tool. It does not replace the journal's current author
guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live Nature Plants submission guidance.
When to trigger
- The author names Nature Plants and wants a fit/framing check for a plant-science paper.
- A specialist molecular, physiological, or ecological plant result must be re-framed into
a broad-significance, Nature-style narrative for a wide plant audience.
- The author is choosing between Nature Plants, a Nature Portfolio sibling, and a strong
specialist plant journal such as
the-plant-cell or new-phytologist.
- The author needs Nature Plants' desk-reject heuristics and a credible alternative route.
Scope & topic fit
- Molecular and cellular plant biology — signaling, gene regulation, cell architecture —
when the mechanism reframes a broadly held understanding.
- Plant development, physiology, and stress responses with conceptual reach beyond one
pathway or species.
- Plant genetics, genomics, and evolution, including domestication and trait architecture
with significance across taxa or systems.
- Plant ecology, plant–microbe and plant–environment interactions framed for cross-field
relevance.
- Crop science and agricultural plant biology when the finding has implications wider than
a single cultivar or trial.
- Methods and resources that open new questions for a broad plant-science community.
Method & evidence bar
- The central claim must carry broad plant-science significance, supported by evidence
matched to the method (genetic, molecular, physiological, ecological, or computational).
- Mechanistic claims require convergent lines of evidence — genetics plus biochemistry plus
cell biology where appropriate — not a single correlative assay.
- Genotype/phenotype and field/ecology claims need adequate replication, controls, and
appropriate statistics; species and germplasm provenance must be documented.
- Genomic, transcriptomic, and structural data must follow community deposition standards;
'-omics' claims need validation beyond list-generation.
- Data and code underlying the central result are expected per Nature reporting and
data-availability policy, with a completed reporting summary.
Structure & house style
- Nature Portfolio format: a significance-forward abstract and an introduction that frames
the broad problem and gap; re-check current article types (Article, Letter, Resource,
Perspective, etc.) on the live guide.
- Main display items must carry the broad-significance argument; specialist controls and
extended datasets move to supplementary information.
- Methods are detailed and reproducible; the reporting summary, statistics reporting, and
data/code statements are required per Nature policy.
- Framing should be legible to plant scientists outside the immediate subfield, not only to
specialists in the exact system.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and
../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the Nature Portfolio anchors, then
cite the current Nature Plants page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Nature Plants submission guidelines" and follow the current
version.
- Re-check article types, abstract/format expectations, the reporting summary, and the
data/code-availability policy.
- Confirm sequence/structure/germplasm deposition requirements and accession-number
reporting where applicable.
- Re-check competing-interests, funding, author-contribution, and AI-use disclosure, and
open-access terms.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions
win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- A technically sound but incremental specialist result with no broad significance.
- Mechanism asserted from a single correlative experiment without genetic or biochemical support.
- Single-condition, single-genotype, or unreplicated phenotyping presented as general.
- '-omics' descriptive catalogues with no functional validation or conceptual advance.
- Framing pitched only to one subfield rather than the broad plant-science readership.
Re-routing decision
- Deep molecular/cellular mechanism, specialist depth →
the-plant-cell or the-plant-journal.
- Ecology, physiology, environmental interactions breadth →
new-phytologist.
- Field-scale agronomy and yield →
field-crops-research.
- Food-systems significance dominant →
nature-food.
- Broad cross-discipline conceptual advance →
nature-ecology-and-evolution or nature-communications.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Nature Plants
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest plant-science topics>
[Broad significance] <why it matters across plant science, not one subfield>
[Method/evidence] <does convergent evidence + reproducibility clear Nature Plants' bar?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <article type / reporting summary / data + accession policy / disclosures>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>