“…Although these changes can be self‐perpetuated over generations by the phenotypic outcome of epigenetic responses (Flores, Wolschin, & Amdam, ), some environmentally induced epigenetic modifications are repeatable across similar environments (Le Luyer et al ., ) and stably inherited across generations (Danchin, ). Recent studies have identified differentially methylated regions associated with adaptive phenotypic variation in postglacial fishes (Best et al ., ), such as lateral plate morphs in three‐spined stickleback (Smith et al ., ), migration phenotypes in rainbow trout ( Oncorhynchus mykiss ) (Baerwald et al ., ) and the degree of behavioural reproductive isolation in tessellated darters ( Etheostoma olmstedi ) (Smith et al ., ). However, the frequency with which environmentally induced epigenetic variation is inherited is currently unknown (Smith & Ritchie, ) and we need to understand how stable heritable phenotypes that result from structural changes in chromatin may feed back to, and influence, genetic variation, ecology, and evolution.…”