Abstract

ABSTRACT Nest predation has driven the evolution of specialized behaviors that decrease the probability that a predator encounters a nest. We collected descriptions from the literature of a behavior wherein male and female adults fly to their nest as a pair, with one bird flying onward or veering off while the other enters the nest. We suggest that the most likely function of this behavior is to decrease the risk of nest predation from visual nest predators. In this hypothesis, visual nest predators are distracted by the flying bird and thus fail to observe the bird arriving to the nest entrance (and the nest itself), although the putative adaptive value of this behavior remains to be confirmed. While this behavior has been sporadically noted in the natural history literature, few ornithologists are aware it is found across multiple taxa, especially in the Neotropics. We show that this behavior occurs in at least 28 species across 5 distinct families (and 11 genera) of passerines. We propose a classificat...

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