“…Environmental parental effects, also known as transgenerational plasticity, are widespread in plants and animals (Bell & Hellmann, 2019; De Long et al, 2021; Donohue, 2009; Herman & Sultan, 2011; Meaney, 2001; Roach & Wulff, 1987; Rossiter, 1991; Weaver et al, 2004). Transgenerational plasticity has been demonstrated in response to a wide variety of ecological factors: temperature (Betini et al, 2020; Landy & Travis, 2018; Lee et al, 2020; Penney et al, 2021; Salinas & Munch, 2012; Sun et al, 2018; Tougeron et al, 2020), salinity (Griffiths et al, 2021), food availability (Kangassalo et al, 2020; Plaistow et al, 2006; Vega‐Trejo et al, 2018), exposure to predation risk (Hellmann et al, 2020; Lehto & Tinghitella, 2020; McGhee et al, 2021; Tariel et al, 2020), herbivory (Sobral, Sampedro, et al, 2021), and conspecific density (Langen et al, 2019; Li et al, 2019; Meise et al, 2016). However, the extent to which these effects represent adaptive plasticity between parent and offspring generations remains contentious (Marshall & Uller, 2007; Sanchez‐Tojar et al, 2020; Uller et al, 2013; Yin et al, 2019).…”