“…The past few decades have seen a rise in the number of studies focused on intraspecific behavioral variation (Bell, Hankison, & Laskowski, 2009; Sih, Cote, Evans, Fogarty, & Pruitt, 2012). In particular, much literature has examined the effects of temporally consistent individual differences in behavior, or so called “animal personalities” (Carter, Feeney, Marshall, Cowlishaw, & Heinsohn, 2013; Gosling, 2001) and their effect on species interactions (Chang, Teo, Norma-Rashid, & Li, 2017; Lichtenstein, Wright, McEwen, Pinter-Wollman, & Pruitt, 2017; Nannini, Parkos III, & Wahl, 2012). Animal personalities imply that there exists a level of constraint to the behavioral plasticity individuals display in any given context (Dall, Houston, & McNamara, 2004; Dingemanse, Kazem, Réale, & Wright, 2010; Dochtermann & Dingemanse, 2013), meaning that individuals may exhibit behavioral consistency through time and across contexts, occasionally to their detriment (Jones & Godin, 2010; Pearish, Hostert, & Bell, 2013; Pruitt, Riechert, & Jones, 2008).…”