Uehling, Jennifer JTaff, Conor CWinkler, David WVitousek, Maren N2019-10-142019-10-142019https://hdl.handle.net/1813/67192Thumbnail Image: Photo of nest box in pond, taken by David Chang van Oordt.Update Note: Uehling_etal_adult_CORT_weather.csv and this readme file were updated on 2019-11-25, by J.J.U. Additional measurements were added (A.Mass.Inc, A.Mass.Prov), and new records were added in the A.Wing and A.Headbill measurements.Early life conditions can have substantial effects on the ways animals respond to stressors as adults. In particular, thermal conditions during development affect juveniles’ responses to stressors, and there is evidence that these effects may extend into adulthood. However, these effects remain poorly understood, especially in free-living organisms. We test the prediction that ambient temperatures during laying, embryonic development, and nestling development affect the hormonal mediators of the response to stressors in adults. To do so, we use a long-term dataset of tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) with records from both natal development and adult breeding. We found a strong, negative relationship between ambient temperature during early development (incubation) and an individual’s corticosterone (CORT) response to stress later in life (while incubating her own young). Thermal conditions during other stages of natal development also showed weak relationships with CORT phenotype in other adult life history stages (baseline CORT during incubation; baseline CORT and the CORT response to stress during provisioning). In a post-hoc analysis, we found no evidence that ambient temperature during development differentially influenced the survival and recruitment of juveniles with different CORT phenotypes. Our results show that thermal conditions during development can have long-term effects on how individuals respond to stressors. This dataset supports the above conclusions.en-USCC0 1.0 Universalcorticosteronedevelopmentstress physiologythermal effectssongbirdData from: Developmental temperature predicts the adult response to stressors in a free-living passerinedatasethttps://doi.org/10.7298/s0va-b776