“…massive parallel sequencing technologies) to identify organisms through traces of DNA left in the environment such as in soil, water, faeces or adhered to actual organisms (Pietramellara et al 2009, Kircher & Kelso 2010, Bohmann et al 2014, Tanaka et al 2014, Boyer et al 2015, Lynggaard et al 2019, Ruppert et al 2019, Thomsen & Sigsgaard 2019). eDNA metabarcoding can be used to detect single or multiple taxa (Bakker et al 2017, Alexander et al 2020, Rota et al 2020, Schütz et al 2020, Zhang et al 2020, Topstad et al 2021), for environmental samples originating from varied ecosystems (Edwards et al 2018, Mariani et al 2019, Clark et al 2020, Fraija-Fernández et al 2020, Webster et al 2020, Carrasco-Puga et al 2021), using fresh or old eDNA samples (Barnes & Turner 2016, Williams et al 2016, Collins et al 2018, Foucher et al 2020) and to study ancient ecosystems (Jørgensen et al 2012, Gugerli et al 2013, Alsos et al 2016, Ruppert et al 2019).…”