Abstract

The extended secretion of stress hormones in fully developed animals is known to have profound consequences. However, little is known about the effects of stress on the behavior and physiology of free-living young animals, and how such responses relate to each other. We repeatedly (during 5 consecutive days, 1 h/day) exposed the nestlings of a passerine bird, the pied flycatcher ( Ficedula hypoleuca), to recordings of nestling distress calls and examined their behavioral and physiological responses to the stressor on the first and the last day of the experiment (on days 9 and 13 post-hatch, respectively). In comparison with control siblings, stressed nestlings reduced the amount of time that they devoted to vocalization and locomotion and increased levels of circulating corticosterone. In 9-day-old nestlings, the level of stress-induced hormone was negatively related to locomotor activity, but not to the rate of vocalizations. The repeated presentation of the stressor increased the heterophile-to-lymphocyte ratio in nestlings but did not affect nestling growth rate. In 13-day-old nestlings, the level of stress-induced corticosterone was not related to behavioral activity. These results suggest that the high level of corticosterone released by immature nestlings in response to a stressor may promote anti-predator behavior (e.g., passive avoidance behavior). Moreover, repeatedly induced stress may have a cumulative and potentially negative effect on individual physiology.

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