“…Pan species are frequently used as referential models for hominin ecology and dietary reconstruction; therefore these species have likewise represented a particular focus within primate isotopic research (e.g., Carter, ; Fahy, Boesch, Hublin, & Richards, ; Fahy, Richards, Riedel, Hublin, & Boesch, ; Macho, ; Macho & Lee‐Thorp, ; Oelze et al, ; Oelze, Head, Robbins, Richards, & Boesch, ; Schoeninger, Moore, & Sept, ; Schoeninger, Most, Moore, & Somerville, ; Smith, Morgan, & Pilbeam, ; Sponheimer et al, ; van Casteren et al, ). As a result, Pan isotope ecology has developed into a growing discipline in which both broad‐ and fine‐scale dietary variation within and between individuals have been detected noninvasively.…”