“…Development of avian embryos and neonates in an environment with increased maternal corticosterone can often have profound, long-lasting effects on their adult phenotype (e.g., Bowers, Bowden, Thompson, & Sakaluk, 2016;Schoech et al, 2011). Compared with the well-documented effects of corticosterone on adults (e.g., Adkins-Regan, Banerjee, Correa, & Schweitzer, 2013;Astheimer, Buttemer, & Wingfield, 1992;Jimeno, Briga, Hau, & Verhulst, 2018;Lõhmus, Sundström, & Moore, 2006;Love, Chin, Wynne-Edwards, & Williams, 2005) and nestlings and fledglings (e.g., Butler, Leppert, & Dufty, 2009;Crino et al, 2011;Kitaysky, Wingfield, & Piatt, 2001;Patterson, Winkler, & Breuner, 2011;Strange, Bowden, Thompson, & Sakaluk, 2016;Wada & Breuner, 2008), considerably less is known about effects of maternally derived corticosterone in the egg on the development of avian embryos (but see reviews in Henriksen, Rettenbacher, & Groothuis, 2011;Williams & Groothuis, 2015). This paucity of information persists despite the potential for all aspects of prenatal (embryonic) and even postnatal (nestling, fledgling) development to be affected by the presence of maternal corticosterone in the egg.…”