“…Correspondingly, the application of eDNA detection to monitoring biodiversity is now well established, with a broad range of applications, including species detection in either an ancient or contemporary context, from the reconstruction of past faunal or floral assemblages to the identification of range expansions / biological invasions (Bohmann et al, 2014). In the freshwater environment, it has been used to document habitat utilisation, detect the presence of rare and invasive species, and quantify spawning activity in pre-defined areas (Bracken, Rooney, Kelly□Quinn, King, & Carlsson, 2019; Stoeckle, Soboleva, & Charlop-Powers, 2017; Thomsen & Willerslev, 2015b), including the extent of upstream spawning migrations in anadromous fish species (Antognazza et al, 2019).…”