“…Studies examining primate feeding ecology within human‐impacted environments have revealed diverse crop‐foraging strategies depending on various factors such as availability, proximity and type of cultivated resources, habitat quality and wild food availability, and perceived risks associated with crop‐foraging (Bryson‐Morrison, Tzanopoulos, Matsuzawa, & Humle, 2017; Hockings, Anderson, & Matsuzawa, 2009; McKinney, 2011; McLennan, 2013; Naughton‐Treves, Treves, Chapman, & Wrangham, 1998; Reynolds, 2005; Strum, 2010). Where crops are fully incorporated into the diets, primates often display changes to activity budget and ranging patterns, spending less time foraging and traveling and more time resting (e.g., Altmann & Muruthi, 1988; Cancelliere, Chapman, Twinomugisha, & Rothman, 2018; Saj, Sicotte, & Paterson, 1999; Strum, 2010; Warren, Higham, MacLarnon, & Ross, 2011). Crop consumption by primates has also been associated with a more effective immune response to parasite infections (e.g., Chapman, Speirs, Gillespie, Holland, & Austad, 2006) and, where crop‐foraging by wildlife is tolerated, a reduction in physiological stress (e.g., Lodge, Ross, Ortmann, & MacLarnon, 2013).…”