“…2; Mann-Kendall trend test: z = 0.9, P = 0.369), even if the highest proportion, from 0.6 to 0.7, is in the last decade. The two most recent celebratory volumes, number 750 and 800, dedicated to 'Emerging trends in aquatic ecology' (Martens, 2015;Naselli-Flores et al, 2017), had a comparable proportion of papers mainly addressing biodiversity issues, respectively 10/14 (* 0.7) and 8/14 (* 0.6), well within the range of the last decade. Thus, Hydrobiologia published studies dealing with 1948-1952 1953-1957 1958-1962 1963-1967 1968-1972 1973-1977 1978-1982 1983-1987 1988-1992 1993-1997 1998-2002 2003-2007 2008-2012 2013-2017 biodiversity even before the notion of the term appeared 40 years ago, and the journal carries on doing so during the biodiversity crisis we are currently experiencing.…”