“…A commonly‐used paradigm to study behavioural sex differences in novel environments is the “emergence test”, in which the fish is moved into a shelter in an unfamiliar environment to measure time taken to emerge. This test has revealed greater male exploratory tendency in guppies and Brachyrhaphis episcopi (Brown, Jones, & Braithwaite, ; Irving & Brown, ) and an opposite sex difference in Chlamydogobius eremius (Moran, Mossop, Thompson, & Wong, ). Exploiting another procedure commonly used in fish and other animals, the open‐field test (Vošlajerová Bímová, Mikula, Macholán, Janotová, & Hiadlovská, ; Ward, ; Warren & Callaghan, ), King, Fürtbauer, Mamuneas, James, and Manica () measured the amount of activity of three‐spined sticklebacks, Gasterosteus aculeatus , in an unfamiliar tank, finding that males were more explorative than females.…”