“…Early studies of humpback dolphins in China applied primarily line-transect techniques to collect information such as relative abundance and distribution (e.g., Jefferson, 2000;Hung and Jefferson, 2004;Chen et al, 2008;Chen et al, 2010). Recent studies have increasingly used mark-recapture techniques for more advanced demographic analyses (e.g., Chan and Karczmarski, 2017;Chen et al, 2018;Zeng et al, 2020;Chan et al, 2022a;Lin et al, 2022;Chan and Karczmarski, 2024). Mark-recapture population modeling techniques not only deliver robust estimates of demographic parameters with considerable accuracy (e.g., Hastings et al, 2011;Pace et al, 2017;Kendall et al, 2019;Oosthuizen et al, 2019a;Schleimer et al, 2019;Bright Ross et al, 2022), but provide also powerful tools to identify the underlying driver(s) of ecological and demographic processes (e.g., Horswill et al, 2014;Oosthuizen et al, 2019b;Coxon et al, 2022;Gabriele et al, 2022;Marneweck et al, 2022;Jordaan et al, 2023) and offer a flexible framework for population monitoring that is both effective and reliable, and applicable across a wide range of taxa and management needs (e.g., Atkinson et al, 2021;Chan et al, 2022b;Goldenberg et al, 2022;Szott et al, 2022;Verborgh et al, 2022).…”