California’s insects are as excessive as the state itself. Between its redwood forests and desert basins may live 60,000, perhaps even 100,000 species—though no one truly knows. That uncertainty drives the California Insect Barcode Initiative, an audacious attempt to document every insect in the state through DNA sequencing.
Leading the effort is Austin Baker, a postdoctoral researcher at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. His mission sounds improbable: to collect, sequence, and catalog every fly, ant, and beetle that hums, crawls, or burrows across California. “You could visit any vegetated area across that state and potentially collect several new (undiscovered and unnamed) insect species,” he says.
Baker and his colleagues are working under the California All-Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (CalATBI), which seeks to “discover it all, protect it forever.” Their approach is exhaustive. California’s habitats range from fog-draped coasts to alpine forests and sun-scorched deserts, each with its own suite of species. To cover this diversity, the team is sampling every ecoregion recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency, deploying a mix of techniques and leaving passive traps in the field for months at a time.
Every specimen collected is preserved and archived, forming a permanent record alongside its DNA barcode. “DNA barcoding is an excellent way to discover and delimit species, although it is not perfect,” Baker explains. “Verifying accuracy requires going back to the voucher material for further examination.”
The undertaking is vast and collaborative. Scientists from UC Berkeley, the California Academy of Sciences, and other institutions work with park rangers and volunteers across the state.
For Baker, who once studied parasitoid wasps and the evolution of sound in crickets and katydids, the project is a natural progression. His field and genetic experience prepared him for the logistical complexity of statewide sampling. What surprises him most is where the richness lies: “It was surprising to learn that the Mojave Desert is one of the most species-rich areas that we sampled,” he says.
Baker says the conversation about insect decline needs better evidence and context—something this project aims to provide. “This project is taking measurements of diversity and abundance across California for the first time to provide future surveys a baseline point of comparison.” It’s painstaking work—sorting tiny bodies, analyzing DNA—but every barcode tells a story. Proof of what once lived. And, perhaps, what might endure.