“…Among the standard theories interpreting the emergence of interindividual behavioral variation, state dependence implies the role of individual state differences in creating behavioral consistencies (Bijleveld et al, ; Dall, Houston, & McNamara, ; Rands, Cowlishaw, Pettifor, Rowcliffe, & Johnstone, ; Sih et al, ). Recent empirical data suggest that not only inherently stable (e.g., gender, morphology; see Sih et al, ), but even labile state variables and/or short‐term differences in environmental conditions can shape behavioral consistency (DiRienzo, Niemelä, Hedrick, & Kortet, ; Horváth, Martín, López, Garamszegi, & Herczeg, ; Horváth, Mészáros, et al, ; Lichtenstein et al, ; Urszán, Garamszegi, et al, ; Urszán et al, ; Urszán, Török, Hettyey, Garamszegi, & Herczeg, ). Such variation can have particularly strong effects during early stages of ontogeny (Dingemanse et al, ; DiRienzo & Montiglio, ; Urszán et al, ), but they are also expected to create long‐lasting effects (DiRienzo, Niemelä, Skog, Vainikka, & Kortet, ; DiRienzo, Pruitt, & Hedrick, ; Krause, Krüger, & Schielzeth, ).…”