“…Although our collaboration grew out of happenstance, it has persisted because the collaborative benefits bridge conventional challenges for studying primate adaptations. Proof of benefit is apparent in the breadth of projects spanning the ecological physiology of feeding in howlers (Williams et al, ; Vinyard et al, , 2012), thermoregulation in tropical and temperate monkeys (Thompson et al, , 2016, Thompson, Scheidel, Glander, Williams, & Vinyard, , Thompson, Powell et al, ) and the sensory ecology underlying scent‐marking in marmosets (Bottenberg et al, ; Thompson et al, ). Despite the seeming lack of congruity at first glance, we can portray each project as trying to understand the ecological physiology of primates.…”