“…Environmental DNA‐based detection has already been applied to several crayfish species including the signal crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus (Dana, 1852), Japanese crayfish Cambaroides japonicus (De Haan, 1841), red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852), spiny‐cheek crayfish Faxonius limosus (Rafinesque, 1817), Shasta crayfish Pacifastacus fortis (Faxon, 1914), and the rusty crayfish Faxonius rusticus (Girard, 1852) (Cowart et al, 2018; Harper et al, 2018; Ikeda et al, 2016; Mauvisseau et al, 2018; Tréguier et al, 2014). Despite concerns that eDNA detection of invertebrates may be challenging due to presence of exoskeletons which may hamper eDNA shedding (Curtis & Larson, 2020; Dunn et al, 2017; Tréguier et al, 2014), as well as poor assay performance when detecting other rare freshwater crayfish species (i.e., Procambarus clarkia (Girard, 1852); Tréguier et al, 2014, and Faxonius eupunctus Williams, 1952; Rice et al, 2018), studies demonstrate that eDNA‐based tools can be effective for crayfish surveillance, even at low densities (Dougherty et al, 2016; Harper et al, 2018). In this study, we developed and validated a sensitive and specific qPCR probe‐based assay to enable detection of A. gouldi from eDNA water samples.…”