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                            In a field that is hyper-focused on efficiency and cost savings, environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling — or detecting fish and wildlife from traces of genetic material in the environment — has become the gold standard. Over the last decade, eDNA sampling has emerged as a powerful and cost-effective tool for national forests to obtain the data they need to make management decisions. Now, Forest Service scientists have created “biochips” that generate these high-value data even more efficiently, buoying the value of eDNA monitoring capacity far into the future.
| Date Taken: | 07.18.2025 | 
| Date Posted: | 09.30.2025 15:25 | 
| Category: | Interviews | 
| Audio ID: | 88624 | 
| Filename: | 2509/DOD_111335875.mp3 | 
| Length: | 00:04:51 | 
| Location: | US | 
| Web Views: | 5 | 
| Downloads: | 0 | 
| High-Res. Downloads: | 0 | 
 
                        This work, Forest Service Podcast: Science You Can Use - Big data on a little chip: New eDNA tools save time and money on invasive species detection and monitoring, by Alexis Neukirch, identified by DVIDS, must comply with the restrictions shown on https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright.