Early-life maltreatment predicts adult stress response in a long-lived wild bird

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Abstract

Persistent phenotypic changes due to early-life stressors are widely acknowledged, but their relevance for wild, free-living animals is poorly understood. We evaluated effects of two natural stressors experienced when young (maltreatment by adults and nutritional stress) on stress physiology in wild Nazca boobies (Sula granti) 6-8 years later, an exceptionally long interval for such studies. Maltreatment as a nestling, but not nutritional stress, was associated years later with depressed baseline corticosterone in females and elevated stress-induced corticosterone concentration [CORT] in males. These results provide rare evidence of long-term hormonal effects of natural early-life stress, which may be adaptive mechanisms for dealing with future stressors.

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Grace, J. K., & Anderson, D. J. (2018). Early-life maltreatment predicts adult stress response in a long-lived wild bird. Biology Letters, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2017.0679

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