She has formally described and named more new insect species than almost anyone currently working in her field — a number that keeps climbing not because she works especially fast, but because she's been doing it, without pause, for over three decades.
Her backlog of collected but unnamed specimens is, by her own estimate, larger than everything she's already published. Taxonomy moves slowly: a new species requires careful comparison against every similar specimen already described, sometimes across multiple countries' collections.
A backlog built to outlast her
She's candid that she will not personally get through the full backlog in her working lifetime, and has already begun training successors specifically to continue the cataloguing after she retires.
Ask her whether that's discouraging, and she describes it instead as the nature of taxonomy itself: an ongoing, generational project, where any single researcher's named species are always just an installment in something much longer.