Abstract

Among birds exhibiting conspecific brood parasitism (CBP), parasites demonstrate a variety of intriguing tactics for selecting a host nest, including preference for safe nests (i.e., avoiding nests depredated during the previous season). Brood parasites of birds that do not reuse nest sites, however, are limited to nest-site information available to them during the current breeding season. This study explores cues used by brood parasites in a population of red-breasted mergansers nesting in upland vegetation and sandy substrate that prohibits reuse of nest sites in consecutive years. Nest-site and host traits were measured for 33 parasitized and 23 non-parasitized nests. There was no association between CBP and nest-site traits potentially providing cues about nest safety from avian predators (concealment and density of nesting larids), likely due to very low rates of egg predation. Distance to shore for parasitized nests was slightly greater than for unparasitized nests. Parasites did not select nests in relation to host age, mass, date of nest initiation, or stage of nesting (laying or incubation). Artificial nests were used to simulate natural nests without a host and to assess whether host presence serves as a cue for parasites. The proportion of natural nests receiving ≥ 1 foreign egg (60% of 15 nests) was thrice that for artificial nests (21% of 14 nests). Some aspect of host presence may therefore be an important, but not necessary, cue for brood parasites targeting nests that are heavily concealed in uplands. Whenever brood parasitism is a well-developed component of reproduction, selection is expected to favor brood parasites that make use of environmental or social information allowing them to discriminate among host nests and maximize reproductive success. We assessed cues used by brood parasites in ground-nesting red-breasted mergansers for which conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is common, and nests are well concealed in upland vegetation. Observations at parasitized and unparasitized nests revealed that nest-site safety and visibility from habitat edges are not central to laying decisions by parasites in this population. Brood parasites, however, were considerably more likely to lay their eggs in natural nests with a host than in artificial nests without a host, suggesting that some aspect of host presence is important in the nest-site selection process for parasites. The ability of brood parasites to discriminate among nests based on host presence is expected to affect parasite success because individuals can avoid nests in which their eggs are doomed to fail (e.g., abandoned nests).

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