We investigated the behavioural mechanisms and adaptive significance of int
raspecific brood parasitism in wood ducks, Air sponsa, by observing a colou
r-marked population in northeastern Illinois for seven breeding seasons (19
89-15395). The birds nested in boxes that were dispersed widely and mounted
high on tree trunks, mimicking the distribution and locations of natural n
esting cavities. During 158 mornings of observation, 103 parasitic eggs wer
e laid: 44 (43%) by females that had nested in the population previously an
d 59 (57%) by new recruits. Parasitism was a facultative behaviour, and its
occurrence varied with a female's age and contents of the box in which she
had previously nested. Returning females (2-7 years old) usually laid agai
n in last year's box, even if another female already was laying there. Each
female behaved as if the box were hers. Indeed, jointly nesting females be
haved so similarly that it was impossible to differentiate the 'host' from
the 'parasite'. Eventually one of these females was forced to depart, often
after a fight. In 66% of cases the earlier-arriving female prevailed. Disp
laced females left behind eggs that were 'parasitic' in the definitional se
nse (i.e. incubated by another female), but parasitism actually was a conse
quence of being evicted from a favoured nestbox. Displaced females usually
laid and incubated a complete clutch in a nearby box; the following year, t
hey again attempted to nest in the box they had used initially. New recruit
s to the population were younger (1-2 years old), and they often did not ne
st. However, they did search widely for nesting cavities. When a new recrui
t found a suitable site that contained an active nest, she sometimes laid a
few parasitic eggs there and, in subsequent seasons, attempted to nest in
the box she had parasitized. Natal females often returned to and laid in th
e box from which they hatched, unless it was occupied by their mother. Adul
t females also actively avoided parasitizing close kin. In general, a nest
cavity that was previously used successfully may be worth returning to, and
fighting for, because its location is known and its quality has been prove
n. Scarcity of preferred nesting sites is probably the key ecological facto
r underlying all four unusual reproductive behaviours that characterize fem
ale wood ducks and other cavity-nesting waterfowl: natal philopatry, nest-s
ite fidelity, aggressive competition for nest sites and high levels of intr
aspecific parasitism. (C) 2001 The Association for the Study of Animal Beha
viour.