First, I gathered all the permits needed to collect the insects, and bought all the materials needed for collecting, preserve and store the samples. Field work was performed in two seasons: spring and summer, with a total of three months duration. Citizens surveys were done simultaneously. Meanwhile, I also attended several teaching training courses and performed 80 hours of teaching. Also, in this period I was lead guest editor of a research topic on urban insects for the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution.
In the second year, the morphological identification of the samples as well as the DNA extractions were performed at the host institution. Then, I fulfilled the first secondment at the University of Trier (Germany) preparing the samples for the DNA metabarcoding. Again, I had 80 teaching hours in the academic year and attended a teaching training course. Further, I led an innovation teaching project and attended a congress on urban development (Urban Transitions 2022) with a poster.
In the last year I could retrieve all the metabarcoding data and performed the secondment to the University of Halle (Germany) to conduct the landscape analyses needed to finish my study, which I am currently preparing for submission. I also finished the analyses of the surveys and submitted the manuscript. I also performed 80 hours teaching and supervised a bachelor student who made the first illustrated guide to the moths of the city of Granada (about to be published). I also attended two international congresses as chair of two symposia on urban biodiversity (ECCB 2024) and ICE 2024), where I also contributed with a talk.
The results of the objectives 1 and 2 are now at the final step and the manuscripts (2) are being prepared for submission to high-impact journals. The results of objective 3 are completely analysed and the manuscript has been sent to publication in the top journal People and Nature. The objective 4 will be accomplished once the results of objective 2 are finished. In addition, the INSANE project has allowed the development of three extra manuscripts on the topic: a meta-analysis on urban arthropods (submitted to the journal Science of the Total Environment) and the other two through the supervision of two MSc students, one already published in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution and the other one (about to be submitted to Urban Ecosystems). All publications are (or will be) in open access. Furthermore, the final databases and methodologies used for publications are in the public repository of the University of Granada (
https://digibug.ugr.es/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)).
The most remarkable exploitation result of the project is the contribution to the zoological collection of the department of Zoology (University of Granada). The reference collection of urban arthropods will count with more than 50,000 individuals. Also, several educational sheets have been created, named as “a walk through urban biodiversity” (available at the website).
Also, the project has been involved in several yearly outreach activities such as The European Researchers Night, the Science Week and the Women in Science Day. . The project also counted with a webpage as well as publicity in the research group “Animal EcoUrban” (Zoology department of the University of Granada). An exhibition called "Live cities: meet the urban fauna" was developed to celebrate the cities’ world day.