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Charting the insect biodiversity of Crete: insights from a pilot metabarcoding survey

Preprint Created on 09 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

Among eukaryotes, insects are by far the most diverse organisms on Earth, yet their global decline threatens ecosystem stability. Understanding local and regional biodiversity patterns is critical for conservation planning, ecosystem management, and predicting responses to environmental change, but traditional surveys for assessing insect diversity (e.g., manual collection, morphological identification, and counting) are highly labor-intensive, time-consuming, and often require rare or simply unavailable dedicated taxonomic expertise. DNA metabarcoding offers an efficient, high-resolution alternative to assess insect communities. Here, we report on the first insect metabarcoding survey on Crete that spans two years of sample collection between 2021 and 2023 from a small area in Southern Central Crete in the context of a citizen science project. A total of 29 samples yielded 10,865 Exact Sequence Variants (ESVs), 10,516 of which were assigned to insects, covering 988 species, 900 genera, and 227 families across 14 orders. A comparison with the existing observation records reveals 406 potential newly-observed species and an estimated 690 unclassified species, indicating substantial cryptic diversity. Our results demonstrate that even small-scale sampling can unravel substantial insect diversity and highlight critical gaps in barcode reference databases. Our study demonstrates how DNA metabarcoding can accelerate biodiversity discovery and monitoring in understudied regions.

Koutsovoulos, G. D., Sorg, M., Hörren, T., Buchner, D., Bourlat, S. J., Langen, K., Trichas, A., Leese, F., Stamatakis, A.

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