Sleep is a conspicuous and prominent behavioural state found across the animal kingdom (Ungurean, van der Meij, Rattenborg, & Lesku, 2020). It is often associated with behavioural correlates, such as quiescence in a species-specific posture, which is rapidly reversible to wakefulness, and a decrease of awareness of the local environment resulting in an increased arousal threshold. Sleep is also regulated by two processes: (a) homeostasis, whereby sleep loss increases sleep need, causing animals to sleep more and/or more intensely (Tobler, 2011), and (b) a circadian process, whereby an internal clock is entrained by environmental zeitgebers, such as 24-hr natural light-dark cycles, to influence the adaptive timing of sleep and wakefulness (Kazimi & Cahill, 1999). In many organisms, once a circadian clock is set, circadian rhythms are (largely) maintained even under constant conditions, such as constant light or dark (Falcon, Besseau, Sauzet, & Boeuf, 2007). These behavioural features of sleep can be used to test for the presence (or absence) of sleep in a diversity of animals in a comparative framework aimed at understand-