“…Globally, their distribution is restricted to shallow coastal and estuarine waters of northern Australia and southern New Guinea (Parra et al, 2002(Parra et al, , 2004Beasley et al, 2005Beasley et al, , 2016Jefferson and Rosenbaum, 2014). Available data suggest that both species are discontinuously distributed as small populations of 50-200 (e.g., Parra et al, 2006a;Palmer et al, 2014; Table 1), which exhibit site fidelity (Parra et al, 2006a;Cagnazzi et al, 2011Cagnazzi et al, , 2013a, limited gene flow between populations (Cagnazzi, 2011;Brown et al, 2014), and are reliant upon near-shore habitats (Parra et al, 2006b;Parra and Jedensjö, 2014). While snubfin and humpback dolphins are data deficient, both species have been assigned precautionary "near threatened" 1 statuses by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in light 1 The IUCN Red List status assessment of "near threatened" for humpback dolphins in Australia was prior to the description of S. sahulensis (Jefferson and Rosenbaum, 2014) and, therefore, considered both S.sahulensis and S.chinensis as a single species (Reeves et al, 2008a).…”