Elevated corticosterone during egg production elicits increased maternal investment and promotes nestling growth in a wild songbird

Glucocorticoids circulating in breeding birds during egg production accumulate within eggs, and may provide a potent form of maternal effect on offspring phenotype. However, whether these steroids affect offspring development remains unclear. Here, we employed a non-invasive technique that experimen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hormones and behavior 2016-07, Vol.83, p.6-13
Hauptverfasser: Bowers, E. Keith, Bowden, Rachel M., Thompson, Charles F., Sakaluk, Scott K.
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container_title Hormones and behavior
container_volume 83
creator Bowers, E. Keith
Bowden, Rachel M.
Thompson, Charles F.
Sakaluk, Scott K.
description Glucocorticoids circulating in breeding birds during egg production accumulate within eggs, and may provide a potent form of maternal effect on offspring phenotype. However, whether these steroids affect offspring development remains unclear. Here, we employed a non-invasive technique that experimentally elevated the maternal transfer of corticosterone to eggs in a wild population of house wrens. Feeding corticosterone-injected mealworms to free-living females prior to and during egg production increased the number of eggs that females produced and increased corticosterone concentrations in egg yolks. This treatment also resulted in an increase in the amount of yolk allocated to eggs. Offspring hatching from these eggs begged for food at a higher rate than control offspring and eventually attained increased prefledging body condition, a trait predictive of their probability of recruitment as breeding adults in the study population. Our results indicate that an increase in maternal glucocorticoids within the physiological range can enhance maternal investment and offspring development. •We non-invasively manipulated maternal deposition of glucocorticoids into eggs.•Elevated glucocorticoids increased the number of eggs laid by free-living females.•Feeding females corticosterone increased the concentration of this steroid in eggs.•Elevated glucocorticoids increased the amount of yolk allocated to eggs.•Elevated in ovo corticosterone enhanced offspring begging for food after hatching.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2016.05.010
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Animal reproduction
Animals
Animals, Newborn - growth & development
Animals, Wild
Begging
Birds
Corticosterone - blood
Corticosterone - metabolism
Egg
Female
Genotype & phenotype
Glucocorticoid
Hormones
House wren
Life history
Maternal Behavior - physiology
Maternal effect
Maternal Inheritance
Oviparity - physiology
Ovum - metabolism
Songbirds - metabolism
Songbirds - physiology
Up-Regulation
title Elevated corticosterone during egg production elicits increased maternal investment and promotes nestling growth in a wild songbird
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