“…The application of eDNA for ecology and conservation research has increased at an exponential rate over the last 20 years (Jiang & Yang, 2017), with more than 50 papers published year on year since 2016 (Beng & Corlett, 2020), from eDNA use for the detection of zooplankton (Yang & Zhang, 2020) to large mammals (Hauger et al, 2020) and many taxa in between. Creative and diverse sample types, such as salt licks (Ishige et al, 2017), blood meal (Rodgers et al, 2017), snow tracks (Franklin et al, 2019), as well as more conventional sampling of water (Brys et al, 2020), sediment (DiBattista et al, 2019) and soil (Marquina et al, 2019), have been taken from all major types of habitats: terrestrial (Abrams et al, 2019), marine (Closeket al, 2019), estuarine (Siegenthaler et al, 2019), lentic (Parsley et al, 2020), and lotic (Takahara et al, 2019).…”