Until 2005,
Orcaella brevirostris was the only recognized species in the genus
Orcaella. However, comparisons within the populations of
Orcaella inhabiting the Asia region and populations inhabiting the Australia/New Guinea region show distinctions in habitat, morphology, and genetics. Morphological differences include skull shape, presence or absence of a median dorsal groove in front of the dorsal fin, height of dorsal fin, and coloration. Genetic analysis constitutes a 5.9% difference between the two populations. In 2005, these significant distinctions considered by Beasley, Arnold and Robertson warranted a taxonomic split of the genus
Orcaella into two separate species,
Orcaella brevirostris and
Orcaella heinsohni.
Orcaella brevirostris known as the
Irrawaddy dolphin consists of the Asian population. The newly recognized species, known as the
Australian snubfin dolphin, consists of the Australian/New Guinea population. The
snubfin dolphins (
Orcaella) contain two of the 35 species of oceanic dolphins that make up the
Cetacean family of
Delphinidae. The phylogenetic status of
Orcaella has long been confused. Although the snubfin dolphins share similar external features with the
Monodontidae (narwhal), Some
molecular analyses indicate that the genus
Orcaella is closely related to the
orca of the genus
Orcinus, the two of them together forming the subfamily Orcininae. However, more recent studies have firmly found that
Orcaella belongs in the
Globicephalinae. ==Habitat==