“…Furthermore, individual differences in behavior of various model species are well‐documented (Tran & Gerlai, ), recognized as “personality” traits or “behavioral syndromes” (Bell, ; Sih & Bell, ; Sih, Bell, & Johnson, ; Sih, Bell, Johnson, & Ziemba, ). Animal behavioral syndromes are consistent across time and contexts (Toms & Echevarria, ), and in rodents have been reported for stress resilience (Koolhaas, ; Koolhaas, Boer, Buwalda, & Reenen, ), catecholamine and corticosterone stress responses (Sgoifo, Boer, Haller, & Koolhaas, ), aggression (de Boer, Vegt, & Koolhaas, ), cognitive abilities (Matzel & Sauce, ), locomotor activity (Friedman, Garland, & Dohm, ), sleep (Tang, Yang, & Sanford, ), and drug abuse (Spoelder et al, ). Current knowledge of behavioral syndromes in fishes (Toms & Echevarria, ) considers five main axes of animal personality: (a) shyness–boldness, (b) exploration–avoidance, (c) activity, (d) aggressiveness, and (e) sociability (Conrad, Weinersmith, Brodin, Saltz, & Sih, ).…”