Brief increases in corticosterone affect morphology, stress responses, and telomere length, but not post-fledging movements, in a wild songbird
Teresa M. Pegan, David W. Winkler, Mark F. Haussmann, Maren N., Vitousek

TL;DR
This study shows that brief corticosterone exposure in wild bird nestlings affects their morphology, stress hormone levels, and telomere length, but does not influence post-fledging movements or survival, indicating hormonal effects during development.
Contribution
It demonstrates that short-term corticosterone exposure during development causes specific phenotypic changes without affecting survival or movement behaviors in wild songbirds.
Findings
Corticosterone-treated nestlings had lower body mass.
They exhibited higher baseline and stress-induced corticosterone levels.
Telomeres were shortened in corticosterone-exposed nestlings.
Abstract
Organisms are frequently exposed to challenges during development, such as poor weather and food shortage. Such challenges can initiate the hormonal stress response, which involves secretion of glucocorticoids. Although the hormonal stress response helps organisms deal with challenges, long-term exposure to high levels of glucocorticoids can have morphological, behavioral, and physiological consequences, especially during development. Glucocorticoids are also associated with reduced survival and telomere shortening. To investigate whether brief, acute exposures to glucocorticoids can also produce these phenotypic effects in free-living birds, we exposed wild tree swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) nestlings to a brief exogenous dose of cort once per day for five days and then measured their morphology, baseline and stress-induced corticosterone levels, and telomere length. We also deployed…
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