Get a good look at this Islanders team, because it’s highly unlikely anything major is going to change on the roster between now and the postseason.

Sources within the organization have recently told The Post the plan leading up to the March 2 trade deadline is to stand pat. That is not to say general manager Garth Snow has turned his phone off in case someone comes calling ready to give away a depth player — especially in light of indispensable two-way center Frans Nielsen’s new apparent injury to his left leg or ankle, which occurred during Sunday night’s 4-0 loss to the Canucks and the seriousness of which is still unknown.

Regardless, Snow is not going to be an active pursuer of anything major between now and March 2.

The reason is twofold, and the first is obvious: The Islanders are atop the Metropolitan Division and, baring a monumental collapse, sailing into their second playoffs in the past eight seasons. The other reason is the organization doesn’t have many draft picks — the most coveted trade chips — and the young players who would be asked for are pretty much all off-limits.

The Islanders sent their first- and second-round picks to the Sabres, in addition to Matt Moulson, in the deal last October that brought Thomas Vanek to Long Island. Vanek then foolishly spurned their $50 million contract offer, was shipped off to Montreal for the remainder of the season, and he’s now piddling away in Minnesota.

Snow sent a second-rounder to the Bruins just before this season as part of a deal that brought back Johnny Boychuk. They even lost their fifth-round pick when they traded it to the Sharks for the exclusive negotiating rights with Dan Boyle — who then signed with the Rangers.

The most valuable prospects the Islanders have are forwards Ryan Strome and Brock Nelson, both playing integral roles for the team. There is a glut of young defensemen in the organization, with Calvin de Haan already a top-four blue liner on the big club, while Matt Donovan sticks around as a constant healthy scratch.

Griffin Reinhart, Ryan Pulock, Scott Mayfield and Aaron Ness are playing in the AHL. Of those four, the 5-foot-10, 192-pound Ness is probably the only expendable one. Although he’s talented, he has not presented a sterling advertisement in the 29 games he has played for the Islanders over the past three seasons, and what he could bring back — if anything — would be expected to be negligible.

As one source in the organization put it: “Our trade deadline was Oct. 4.”

That was the day just before this season started when the Isles obtained Boychuk from the Bruins and Nick Leddy from the Blackhawks — the latter for two defensive prospects, Ville Pokka and T.J. Brennan, along with the rights for restricted-free-agent goalie Anders Nilsson.

Those two additions immediately took the Islanders blue line from a source of weakness to a strength. With Boychuk and Leddy paired, Travis Hamonic and de Haan make up a second pair and round out a stout top four. The third pair with Lubomir Visnovsky is always going to be defensively shaky, no matter if it’s Thomas Hickey, Brian Strait, Donovan, or anyone from Bridgeport. But what Visnovsky brings key attributes to the offense, especially on the power play.

So much so, coach Jack Capuano has begun to rest the 38-year-old intermittently, giving him off for Saturday afternoon’s 3-2 shootout loss to the Capitals in Washington, then putting him back in for Sunday’s Coliseum match against Vancouver.

“Moving forward, and I think our team should know, we play a lot of hockey,” Capuano said. “Not every guy is going to play every game, I can tell you that.”

So there might be a bit of rotating between now and the playoffs, but this trade deadline is likely to come and go without much of a fuss.