vol. 11, no. 1 (2015)
DAVAO RESEARCH JOURNAL
Description
The Davao Research Journal (DRJ) is an Open Access (OA), free of charge journal, subsidized by the Davao Oriental State University as its flagship multidisciplinary journal that is edited by head of the Journal Publication and Development Unit of the university. It publishes peer-reviewed articles of original investigations not published elsewhere except as a brief abstract in a scientific meeting, proceedings or symposium. It aims to publish articles online on all work and studies on applied or scientific research in Agriculture, Aquaculture, Biology, Biodiversity, Ecology, Ecosystems, Education, Environmental Science, Farming practices, Fisheries, Gender, Humanities, Insects, Life Sciences, Limnology, Management, Marine Sciences, Mathematics, Physics, Social Sciences, Value Chain and social-related aspects that directly or indirectly affect human populations, communities, students, and researchers. The quality of the journal is guaranteed by the Editorial Board, consisting of well-published researchers in various fields of study. DRJ publishes research in English and welcomes papers from all over the world in the topics mentioned above and endeavors to make the accepted articles immediately available online for the wider scientific community by publishing content on this platform. We adhere to the belief of making these contents openly available to thus contributing to human and scientific development.
Table of contents
Open Access Subscription Access
Articles
Expanding New Niche for DRJ: Evolution of an institutional Scholarly Publication
Emily S Antonio
Nutrient and Chemical Composition of Sea Hare, Dolabella auricularia in Pujada Bay, Davao Oriental
Janeth C Tayone | Jared T Morales | Lea A. Jimenez
Discipline: Environmental Science
Sediment Accumulation Rates in Pujada Bay as Determined by Sediment Traps
Joy M. Sorrosa | Janeth C Tayone | Wilanfranco C. Tayone | Ariel Eballe | Bernadette J. Nanual | Ivan L Saligumba
Discipline: Environmental Science
Sustainable tourism in an ecologically critical area: Implications to Dahican and its threatened marine megafauna
Lea A. Jimenez | Bernadette J. Nanual | Diana Maria Margarita Verdote | Maria Jessica June Labaja | Marlo Khen D. Inabiogan | France Guillian B Rapiz
Discipline: Environmental Science