TY - JOUR T1 - Forest decline differentially affects trophic guilds of canopy-dwelling beetles JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2020.02.11.943753 SP - 2020.02.11.943753 AU - Aurélien Sallé AU - Guilhem Parmain AU - Benoît Nusillard AU - Xavier Pineau AU - Ravène Brousse AU - Tiphanie Fontaine-Guenel AU - Romain Ledet AU - Cécile Vincent-Barbaroux AU - Christophe Bouget Y1 - 2020/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/06/29/2020.02.11.943753.abstract N2 - Context Decline in a context of climate change is expected to induce considerable changes in forest structure, potentially affecting habitat opportunities and trophic resources for numerous species. Nonetheless, the consequences of decline on forest biodiversity have rarely been studied.Aim We aimed to characterize the impact of oak decline on different guilds of canopy-dwelling beetles.Methods Beetles were sampled for three consecutive years in oak stands exhibiting different levels of decline. Several guilds were considered: (i) Buprestidae, (ii) other saproxylic beetles split into wood-boring species and non-wood-boring species, (iii) seed-eating weevils, and (iv) specialist and generalist leaf-eating weevils.Results Overall, decline had positive effects on the abundance and biomass of beetles, though contrasting variations were observed at the species or guild levels. Xylophagous species, especially the main oak-associated buprestids, and other saproxylic species benefitted from decline conditions. However, at odds with the insect performance hypothesis, decline had a positive effect on generalist phyllophagous species, a negative effect on specialist phyllophagous species, and a null effect on seminiphagous species.Conclusion The increase in species richness for saproxylic and phyllophagous beetle communities suggests that decline might promote forest biodiversity. Our results call for further studies to thoroughly assess the functional outcomes of forest decline, and to suggest management strategies for conservation biologists.Key message Decline can affect the structure, resources and microclimates of the forest canopy, and potentially have cascading effects on canopy-dwelling species. Our survey shows that an oak decline can promote saproxylic beetles, especially xylophagous ones, and generalist phyllophagous weevils. However, it negatively affects specialist phyllophagous species and has no effect on seminiphagous weevils.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. ER -