Previous studies of the role of nest prédation in conspecific nest parasitism have not taken into account the possibility that prédation risk may not be randomly distributed among nest sites and that breeding individuals may use different cues to assess the risk and adjust their reproductive tactic between years accordingly. Especially in cavity-nesting species, the role of nest prédation in conspecific nest parasitism has been downplayed, while the role of nest s,ite limitation has been highlighted. Using both observational and experimental data, I show that in the common goldeneye (Bucephala clangula), a cavity-nesting species in which conspecific nest parasitism is common, prédation risk varies considerably between nest sites and does not follow a random expectation. The inequality in prédation risk between nest sites also showed up in the occurrence of parasitized nests in an experimental setup. Nests parasitized in year t were more frequent in those nest sites that were not depredated during the previous nesting attempt in year t -n than in nest sites that were depredated and in control nest sites that had not been used for nesting before. A nest site addition experiment revealed that conspecific nest parasitism was not associated with nest site limitation. My findings give support for the hypothesis that nest prédation is an important ecological factor explaining conspecific nest parasitism in goldeneyes. © 1999 International Society for Behavioral Ecology.
CITATION STYLE
Pöysä, H. (1999). Conspecific nest parasitism is associated with inequality in nest prédation risk in the common goldeneye (Bucephala clangula). Behavioral Ecology, 10(5), 533–540. https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/10.5.533
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