“…DNA methylation is the best characterized epigenetic modification (Lea, Vilgalys, Durst, & Tung, ) and has important roles on pretranscriptional control in several biological processes, such as cell differentiation and genomic imprinting (Koch et al, ). Variation in DNA methylation is not completely independent from the genome, and epialleles can have different degrees of autonomy from the genotype (Berbel‐Filho, Rodríguez‐Barreto, Berry, Garcia de Leaniz & Consuegra, ; Richards ; Dubin et al, ; Leung, Breton, & Angers, ). In addition, in some plants and animals, individuals with low levels of heterozygosity display high levels of genome‐wide DNA methylation variation (Liebl, Schrey, Richards, & Martin, ; Richards, Schrey, & Pigliucci, ; Schrey et al, ), suggesting that DNA methylation could contribute to the adaptation of organisms with limited genetic diversity to environmental change (Castonguay & Angers, ; Douhovnikoff & Dodd, ; Liebl et al, ; Schrey et al, ; Verhoeven & Preite, ).…”