The umbrella species concept is a popular conservation planning tool which postulates that conservation schemes targeting a specific species will indirectly benefit many other sympatric species. In Scandinavia and Central Europe, the White-backed Woodpecker (Dendrocopos leucotos) is considered an umbrella species for woodland birds and cryptogam species of conservation concern. Whether this also applies to saproxylic beetles, a group of high conservation concern, remains open. Therefore, we tested that umbrella function in Central European beech forests that are currently recolonized by this woodpecker. Relying on radiotracking data, we compared saproxylic beetle communities within the breeding home ranges of White-backed Woodpeckers (high and low activity of the bird) against forests with ascertained absence of the bird (control). Bayesian inference for linear regressions identified that species richness of threatened saproxylic beetles was 1.51 (lower and upper 5 % PPCrI=[1.09; 2.01]) times higher in sites with high White-backed Woodpecker activity compared to the control. Community composition analyses on threatened saproxylic beetles showed a reduced β-diversity at low and high White-backed Woodpecker sites compared to the control. Finally, an indicator species analysis showed that 17 saproxylic beetle species, including 4 threatened species, were positively associated with White-backed Woodpecker’s breeding home ranges, while only 3 species, but no threatened species, were associated with the control sites. Overall, our results suggest that the White-backed Woodpecker plays the role of an umbrella species for threatened saproxylic beetle communities, opening new opportunities for conservation planning in European beech forests.
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