“…For example, in a diversity of taxa, mothers exposed to predation risk produce offspring with altered phenotypes compared to offspring of unexposed mothers (e.g. birds: Coslovsky & Richner, 2011; daphnia: Agrawal, Laforsch, & Tollrian, 1999; fish: McGhee, Pintor, Suhr, & Bell, 2012; mammals: Sheriff, Krebs, & Boonstra, 2009; insects: Storm & Lima, 2010; reptiles: Bestion, Teyssier, Aubret, Clobert, & Cote, 2014). There is growing appreciation of the ecological and evolutionary significance of such nongenetic transgenerational effects (reviewed in: Badyaev & Uller, 2009; Monaghan, 2008; Sheriff & Love, 2013).…”