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Extra-pair paternity (EPP) is extremely variable among species of birds,
both in its frequency and in the behavioral events that produce it. A flood of
field studies and comparative analyses has stimulated an array of novel ideas,
but the results are limited in several ways. The prevailing view is that EPP is
largely the product of a female strategy. We evaluate what is known about the
behavioral events leading to EPP and find the justification for this view to be
weak. Conflict theory (derived from selection theory) predicts that adaptations
in all the players involved will influence the outcome of mating interactions,
producing complex and often highly variable patterns of behavior and levels of
EPP. Data support some of these predictions, but alternative hypotheses abound.
Tests of predictions from conflict theory will require better information on
how males and females encounter one another, behave once they have met, and
influence fertilization once insemination has occurred.