“…The expansion in the use of fish models is well illustrated by the increase in the number of zebrafish facilities globally from an estimated 667 in 2011 (Lawrence et al ., 2012) to 1581 in 2023 (http://www.zfin.org). Today, zebrafish models are used by scientists in a wide range of disciplines including embryology (Pathak & Barresi, 2020), physiology (Kwong, Kumai & Perry, 2014), neuroscience (Hall et al ., 2014), behaviour (McArthur, Chow & Fetcho, 2020), epigenetics (Cavalieri & Spinelli, 2017), ecotoxicology (Bambino & Chu, 2017), disease biology (Bailone et al ., 2020) and the effects of climate change (Pinheiro et al ., 2021). The ability to create genetically selected and/or manipulated zebrafish lines has furthermore enabled significant advances in precision for ecotoxicology (Cassar et al ., 2020), disease processes (Adamson, Sheridan & Grierson, 2018) and human drug validation studies (Winter et al ., 2022).…”