“…Environmental DNA from terrestrial animals has been mostly assessed by analyzing scats (De Barba et al, 2014; Kartzinel et al, 2015; Swift et al, 2018), soil (Leempoel et al, 2020; Yoccoz et al, 2012; Zinger et al, 2019), stomach content samples (Kennedy et al, 2019; Masonick et al, 2019; Soininen et al, 2013), leeches blood meals (Abrams et al, 2019; Nguyen et al, 2021; Tilker et al, 2020; Weiskopf et al, 2018; Wilting et al, 2021), or carrion flies (Calvignac‐Spencer et al, 2013; Gogarten et al, 2020; Rodgers et al, 2017; Schubert et al, 2015). Bulk tissue samples (mixtures of, e.g., insects or other macroinvertebrate specimens) are also increasingly used not only to assess invertebrate diversity but also as an indirect way to sample vertebrate DNA (Lynggaard et al, 2019).…”