Artificial nests have been used extensively to study nesting ecology of sev
eral avian species. However, the effect of human scent on depredation rates
of artificial nests has been questioned. Researchers leave scent trails as
they move through brush conducting field experiments, and the trails may b
e used by predators as cues to locate nests. Researchers have attempted to
limit the effect their scent may have on depredation rates of nests, but me
thodologies have not been tested. We used depredation rates of artificial n
ests to test our hypothesis that humans cannot conceal their scent from pre
dators. We equally divided 300 artificial ground nests among 15400-m transe
cts. Each treatment (human scent masked by a neutralizing agent, human scen
t masked by dog scent, and human scent as a control) was replicated evenly
among the transects. We checked nests every 3 days over a 24-day period and
recorded depredated nests. We detected no differences in rates of depredat
ion between the 3 treatments. Predators that use olfaction as their primary
means to locate prey were capable of locating nests despite our attempts t
o conceal our scent trails. Although researchers often include scent-maskin
g methodologies within depredation studies of artificial nests, such attemp
ts appear ineffective.