Physiological mechanisms that pleiotropically affect condition, life-history decisions,
and fitness may covary with the expression of sexually selected ornaments. The adrenocortical
stress response regulates energy balance, controls vertebrate responses to survival
threats, and may divert energy expenditure away from investment in costly sexual displays.
Further, developmental stress may induce correlations between the stress response
during adulthood and sexual signals that develop early in life, such as song in oscine
birds. We examined the relationship between the adrenocortical stress response (measured
by plasma corticosterone concentrations) and the sexually selected traits of song
complexity and song rate in song sparrows (Melospiza melodia). Additionally, we explored
whether the stress response, song complexity, or song rate predict other male quality
and fitness metrics. In contrast to prior research, which reports negative relationships
between song complexity and the stress response in this species, males with larger
song repertoires had larger stress responses. Song rate was unrelated to the stress
response, but positively correlated with male body mass and nestling mass. In addition,
males with higher syllable diversity had longer wingchords and lower hematocrit, males
with larger song repertoires had heavier nestlings and higher hematocrit, and males
with larger stress responses and baseline corticosterone had higher hematocrit. Results
suggest that the relationship between the stress response and song complexity is context-dependent,
and that song repertoire size, syllable diversity, and song rate serve distinct signaling
functions.