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1. Smell throughout the life course.

2. Assessing color cues of development, breeding status and reproductive condition in captive golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia).

3. Evaluating genital skin color as a putative sexual signal in wild saddleback (Leontocebus weddelli) and emperor (Saguinus imperator) tamarins.

4. The sensory ecology of primate food perception, revisited.

5. Two hundred and five newly assembled mitogenomes provide mixed evidence for rivers as drivers of speciation for Amazonian primates.

6. Variation in predicted COVID‐19 risk among lemurs and lorises.

7. On the trail of primate scent signals: A field analysis of callitrichid scent‐gland secretions by portable gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry.

8. Infant cannibalism in wild white‐faced capuchin monkeys.

9. Primate life history, social dynamics, ecology, and conservation: Contributions from long‐term research in Área de Conservación Guanacaste, Costa Rica.

10. The nutritional importance of invertebrates to female Cebus capucinus imitator in a highly seasonal tropical dry forest.

11. Platyrrhine color signals: New horizons to pursue.

12. Colour vision variation in leaf‐nosed bats (Phyllostomidae): Links to cave roosting and dietary specialization.

13. Using urinary parameters to estimate seasonal variation in the physical condition of female white-faced capuchin monkeys ( Cebus capucinus imitator).

14. Howler monkey foraging ecology suggests convergent evolution of routine trichromacy as an adaptation for folivory.

15. Seasonal importance of flowers to Costa Rican capuchins ( Cebus capucinus imitator): Implications for plant and primate.

16. Visual ecology of true lemurs suggests a cathemeral origin for the primate cone opsin polymorphism.

17. Male endocrine response to seasonally varying environmental and social factors in a neotropical primate, Cebus capucinus.

18. Quantifying seasonal fallback on invertebrates, pith, and bromeliad leaves by white-faced capuchin monkeys ( C ebus capucinus) in a tropical dry forest.

19. Technical Note: Calcium and carbon stable isotope ratios as paleodietary indicators.

20. Evolutionary renovation of L/ M opsin polymorphism confers a fruit discrimination advantage to ateline New World monkeys.

21. Why Aye-Ayes See Blue.

22. Using Cytochome c to Monitor Electron Transport and Inhibition in Beef Heart Submitochondrial Particles.

23. Picking pithy plants: Pith selectivity by wild white‐faced capuchin monkeys, Cebus imitator.

24. Fermented food consumption in wild nonhuman primates and its ecological drivers.

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