“…Ship strike is a threat to many megafaunal species, including M. alfredi, and given the species' behavioural preference of occupancy of the upper 20 m of the water column (Jaine et al, 2014, Peel, 2019 and the increasing boat traffic in regions adjacent to the Ningaloo WHA (see Bejder et al, 2019), it is perhaps unsurprising that ship strike injuries have come to recent attention. In the Ningaloo Reef WHA, there have been recent graphic examples of damage to M. alfredi from vessel strike, the rate of which is likely underestimated (McGregor et al, 2019), while for R. typus, the proportion of the population detected bearing injuries consistent with ship strike is increasing (Speed et al, 2008;Lester et al, 2020). As M. alfredi has a naturally low rate of potential population growth, an increase in the rate of injury or mortality due ship strike is concerning, and therefore implementation of hazard mitigation strategies for core use areas should be considered.…”