Dendrocopos major (Great Spotted Woodpecker) European Red List of Birds Supplementary Material The European Union (EU27) Red List assessments were based principally on the official data reported by EU Member States to the European Commission under Article 12 of the Birds Directive in 2013-14. For the European Red List assessments, similar data were sourced from BirdLife Partners and other collaborating experts in other European countries and territories. For more information, see BirdLife International (2015). Contents Reported national population sizes and trends p. 2 Trend maps of reported national population data p. 4 Sources of reported national population data p. 6 Species factsheet bibliography p. 11 Recommended citation BirdLife International (2015) European Red List of Birds. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities. Further information http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/info/euroredlist http://www.birdlife.org/europe-and-central-asia/european-red-list-birds-0 http://www.iucnredlist.org/initiatives/europe http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/conservation/species/redlist/ Data requests and feedback To request access to these data in electronic format, provide new information, correct any errors or provide feedback, please email [email protected]. THE IUCN RED LIST OF THREATENED SPECIES™ BirdLife International (2015) European Red List of Birds Dendrocopos major (Great Spotted Woodpecker) Table 1. Reported national breeding population size and trends in Europe1. Country (or Population estimate Short-term population trend4 Long-term population trend4 Subspecific population (where relevant) 2 territory) Size (pairs)3 Europe (%) Year(s) Quality Direction5 Magnitude (%)6 Year(s) Quality Direction5 Magnitude (%)6 Year(s) Quality Albania 500-1,000 <1 2002-2012 poor 0 0 2002-2012 poor - 10-20 1980-2012 poor Andorra 200-300 <1 1999-2001 medium ? ? Armenia 1,000-2,000 <1 2002-2012 medium ? ? Austria 100,000-150,000 1 2001-2012 medium + 10-20 2000-2011 medium ? all others Azerbaijan 5,000-20,000 <1 1996-2000 poor ? ? Belarus 300,000-500,000 2 2000-2012 medium 0 0 2000-2012 medium 0 0 1980-2012 medium Belgium 40,000-50,000 <1 2008-2012 poor + 1-23 2000-2012 medium + 264-355 1973-2012 medium all others Bosnia & HG 80,000-100,000 1 2010-2014 poor ? ? Bulgaria 90,000-150,000 1 2005-2012 medium F 5-15 2000-2012 medium F 5-15 1980-2012 medium all others Croatia 50,000-100,000 <1 2014 poor ? ? Czech Rep. 272,800-545,600 2 2012 medium + 21-43 2000-2012 good + 28-52 1982-2012 good all others Denmark 38,500 <1 2011 medium + 25-50 1999-2011 good + 25-50 1980-2011 good all others Estonia 40,000-80,000 <1 2008-2012 medium 0 0-10 2001-2012 medium 0 0-10 1980-2012 medium all others Finland 210,000-560,000 2 2006-2012 good F 0 2001-2012 good + 52-107 1983-2012 good all others France 250,000-400,000 2 2008-2012 medium + 15 2001-2011 medium + 75 1989-2011 medium all others Georgia Present <1 ? ? Germany 680,000-1,050,000 5 2005-2009 medium + 7-19 1998-2009 good + 6-29 1990-2009 good all others Greece 1,000-2,000 <1 2008-2012 poor ? ? all others Hungary 274,000-349,000 2 2000-2012 medium + 21 1999-2012 medium ? all others Rep. Ireland 19-34 <1 2012 medium + 171-386 2009-2012 medium all others Italy 70,000-150,000 1 2007 poor + 65-75 2000-2012 medium + 65-75 1990-2012 poor all others Kosovo 20,000-40,000 <1 2009-2014 medium ? ? Latvia 193,404-334,147 2 2011 good 0 0-20 2005-2012 good + 0-200 1994-2010 medium all others Liechtenstein 80-100 <1 2009-2014 medium 0 0 2003-2014 medium 0 0 1980-2014 medium Lithuania 50,000-100,000 <1 2008-2012 medium 0 0 2001-2012 medium 0 0 1980-2012 medium all others Luxembourg 3,000-5,000 <1 2008-2012 medium 0 0 2000-2012 poor ? all others FYRO Macedonia 500-1,000 <1 2001-2012 poor ? ? Moldova 3,500-4,000 <1 2000-2010 medium 0 0 2000-2010 medium 0 0 1980-2010 medium Montenegro 10,000-20,000 <1 2002-2012 poor ? ? Netherlands 72,027-85,123 <1 2008-2011 medium + 18-45 2002-2011 medium + 69-136 1984-2011 medium all others Norway 10,000-35,000 <1 2000-2013 poor F 0 2008-2013 good 0.0 0 1980-2013 good Poland 620,000-911,000 5 2008-2012 good + 20-40 2000-2012 good ? all others THE IUCN RED LIST OF THREATENED SPECIES™ BirdLife International (2015) European Red List of Birds Dendrocopos major (Great Spotted Woodpecker) Table 1. Reported national breeding population size and trends in Europe1. Country (or Population estimate Short-term population trend4 Long-term population trend4 Subspecific population (where relevant) 2 territory) Size (pairs)3 Europe (%) Year(s) Quality Direction5 Magnitude (%)6 Year(s) Quality Direction5 Magnitude (%)6 Year(s) Quality Portugal 100,000-500,000 1 2008-2012 medium 0 0 2004-2011 medium ? all others Romania 300,000-500,000 2 2010-2013 medium F 0-20 2001-2013 medium ? all others Russia 7,800,000-10,000,000 56 2000-2008 medium + 5-30 2000-2012 poor - 5-30 1980-2012 medium Serbia 110,000-175,000 1 2008-2012 medium 0 0 2000-2012 medium 0 0 1980-2012 medium Slovakia 30,000-60,000 <1 2002 medium 0 0 2000-2012 medium 0 0 1980-2012 medium all others Slovenia 52,000-105,000 <1 2002-2010 medium ? ? all others Spain 256,500-474,000 2 2004-2006 good + 76 1998-2012 good + 1980-2012 medium all others ES: Canary Is 1,000 <1 1997-2003 poor ? + 1980-2012 poor D. m. thanneri ES: Canary Is 200 <1 1997-2003 poor + 2001-2012 poor + 1980-2012 medium D. m. canariensis Sweden 144,000-269,000 1 2008-2012 medium + 41-65 2001-2012 good 0 0 1980-2012 good all others Switzerland 40,000-60,000 <1 2008-2012 medium + 15-43 2001-2012 good + 90-159 1990-2012 medium Turkey 25,000-100,000 <1 2013 medium - 0-19 2000-2012 good - 0-19 1990-2013 poor Ukraine 450,000-1,130,000 5 2000 medium 0 0 2001-2012 medium 0 0 1980-2012 medium United Kingdom 130,000-150,000 1 2009 medium + 97 1998-2010 good + 141 1980-2010 good all others EU27 4,020,000-7,020,000 34 Increasing Europe 12,900,000-19,300,000 100 Increasing 1 See 'Sources' at end of factsheet, and for more details on individual EU Member State reports, see the Article 12 reporting portal at http://bd.eionet.europa.eu/article12/report. 2 The designation of geographical entities and the presentation of the material do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of IUCN or BirdLife International concerning the legal status of any country, territory or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. 3 In the few cases where population size estimates were reported in units other than those specified, they were converted to the correct units using standard correction factors. 4 The robustness of regional trends to the effects of any missing or incomplete data was tested using plausible scenarios, based on other sources of information, including any other reported information, recent national Red Lists, scientific literature, other publications and consultation with relevant experts. 5 Trend directions are reported as: increasing (+); decreasing (-); stable (0); fluctuating (F); or unknown (?). 6 Trend magnitudes are rounded to the nearest integer. THE IUCN RED LIST OF THREATENED SPECIES™ BirdLife International (2015) European Red List of Birds Trend maps A symbol appears in each country where the species occurs: the shape and colour of the symbol represent the population trend in that country, and the size of the symbol corresponds to the proportion of the European population occurring in that country. KEY Ç Large increase (≥50%) È Large decrease (≥50%) Ç Moderate increase (20–49%) È Moderate decrease (20–49%) Ç Small increase (<20%) È Small decrease (<20%) ñ Increase of unknown magnitude ò Decrease of unknown magnitude å Stable or fluctuating 0 Unknown ¢ Present (no population or trend data) Ð Extinct since 1980 Each symbol, with the exception of Present and Extinct, may occur in up to three different size classes, corresponding to the proportion of the European population occurring in that country. ñ Large: ≥10% of the European population ñ Medium: 1–9% of the European population ñ Small: <1% of the European population The designation of geographical entities and the presentation of the material do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of IUCN or BirdLife International concerning the legal status of any country, territory or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. THE IUCN RED LIST OF THREATENED SPECIES™ BirdLife International (2015) European Red List of Birds Figure 1. Breeding population sizes and short-term trends across Europe. Figure 2. Breeding population sizes and long-term trends across Europe. THE IUCN RED LIST OF THREATENED SPECIES™ BirdLife International (2015) European Red List of Birds Dendrocopos major (Great Spotted Woodpecker) Sources Albania Breeding population size: Bino pers. obs. Breeding short-term trend: Bino pers. obs. Breeding long-term trend: Bino pers. obs. Andorra Breeding population size: BirdLife International 2004 Armenia Breeding population size: ASPB data Austria: all others Breeding population size: BirdLife Austria, extrapolation on the basis of available unpublished and published population and density data Breeding short-term trend: N.
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