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Our story

If water means life, groundwater is the precious but fragile scaffolding of our planet, as it provides the most abundant but oversighted unfrozen freshwater reservoir on Earth.

 

Importantly, groundwater ecosystems also host a myriad of species that play a crucial role in preserving the integrity of the global water cycle through their biological cycles. Nonetheless, current knowledge on groundwater biodiversity and ecological dynamics at global scale is far from being complete, resulting in groundwater ecosystems not being effectively assessed nor protected. As a result of this blind approach, groundwater species are being increasingly exposed to multi-layered threats such as contamination, over-extraction and climate change, with the ultimate risk to compromise the vast number of ecosystems services that groundwaters provide.

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The Global Research on eDNA in Groundwaters (GReG) aims to globally assess subterranean aquatic diversity and related ecological dynamics via environmental DNA (eDNA) approaches, significantly contributing to advancing our understanding on the importance, functions and services of groundwater ecosystems on Earth.

 

GReG was initially pitched during the last International Conference on Subterranean Biology held in Sardinia in September 2024. Nine months after, the 5th of June 2025 saw the birth of GReG via an on-line seminar that gathered 52 researchers across four continents, and organised by Dr Mattia Saccò - a Lecturer and leader of the Subterranean Research and Groundwater Ecology (SuRGE) Group at Trace and Environmental DNA (TrEnD) Lab, Curtin University - in partnership with Dr Michelle Guzik (Adelaide University) and Dr Kathryn Korbel (Macquarie University).

 

The value of this research is emphasised by the alignment of GReG to the United Nations “Sustainable Development Goal 6: Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all”.

Meet GReG

We are an international consortium of groundwater experts, researchers, practitioners, regulators, and stakeholders. Collectively we aim to advance groundwater research with environmental DNA to highlight ecological vulnerability and promote conservation management.

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The 52 researchers directly involved in the current project represent 29 institutions from 16 countries from Europe, Australia, North America, and Asia.

Our team

The project

Phase 1 (June 2025 - June 2026): The first global eDNA study of groundwaters.

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Documenting 45 high-profile groundwater sites from 17 countries across Europe, Australia, Asia, North America through standardized eDNA sampling and analytical protocols targeting the entire Tree of Life.

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Phase 1 will also see publications based on shared expertise and challenges in the field of groundwater eDNA and development of international grant applications that will allow us to be inclusive of the Global South.

Vision for the future

Phase 2 (from June 2026): Expansion of GReG to include underrepresented global regions.

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From the lessons learned and interest generated in Phase 1, the next step will be to expand the project beyond developed countries to include the Global South and other under-investigated areas of the world via participatory science approaches.

GReG's collaborative partners

Partner institutions

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Research projects

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Research labs

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Global datasets

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Want to know more about GReG?

Get in touch so we can start working together.

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