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Global Insect Diversity and Microgastrinae Wasp Study

Global Insect Diversity and Microgastrinae Wasp Study

A PNAS study (29 June 2026) estimates global insect species at 14.2–20.3 million, based on intensive sampling in Costa Rica’s Área de Conservación Guanacaste (ACG).

Key findings

  • Global estimate: 14.2–20.3 million insect species, versus the long-standing ~6 million estimate.
  • Formally described: ~1.2 million insect species named; up to ~95% remain undescribed.
  • ACG survey: ACG area = 169,000 hectares; intensive sampling yielded ~53,945 insect species from 15 core Malaise traps and >1.6 million specimens.
  • Projected ACG diversity: ~332,846–333,000 insect species estimated for ACG, including ~2,400 Microgastrinae wasp species.
  • Focal taxon — Microgastrinae: A hyperdiverse subfamily of Braconidae parasitoid wasps that develop inside lepidopteran caterpillars; used as a biodiversity “yardstick”.
  • Methods: 15 Malaise traps (tent-like interception nets) + DNA barcoding for specimen-level delimitation; barcoding commonly targets the mitochondrial COI gene.
  • Scaling approach: Researchers scaled local insect richness to global totals using tree-species ratios (ACG 1,200–1,500 trees; global ~73,000) and comparative data from mammals, amphibians and Saturniidae moths.

IASPOINT Booster Facts

  • Publication: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), 29 June 2026.
  • ACG status: Área de Conservación Guanacaste is a recognised biodiversity reserve in northwestern Costa Rica.
Last Modified: July 6, 2026

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